Accuracy?

Briannaquinn16

Songster
5 Years
Joined
Feb 18, 2021
Messages
409
Reaction score
316
Points
161
So I have Govee thermometers/checks humidity too Kuz I was worried about my incubators being inaccurate….which one should I follow? The incubators or the govee thermometer?
 

Attachments

  • IMG_8051.jpeg
    IMG_8051.jpeg
    430.2 KB · Views: 15
  • IMG_8050.jpeg
    IMG_8050.jpeg
    382.3 KB · Views: 4
  • IMG_8049.jpeg
    IMG_8049.jpeg
    404.2 KB · Views: 4
I trust my govee thermometers, but I don’t know about the hydrometer?
They always show lower readings than the incubators do, and since I dry hatch I don’t pay a lot of attention to humidity.
I have 4 incubators going and they all show the same humidity %, but I know if I put my govee’s in they would read lower humidity than the incubators hydrometer does.
 
I trust my govee thermometers, but I don’t know about the hydrometer?
They always show lower readings than the incubators do, and since I dry hatch I don’t pay a lot of attention to humidity.
I have 4 incubators going and they all show the same humidity %, but I know if I put my govee’s in they would read lower humidity than the incubators hydrometer does.
Yeah that’s the thing I’m running into, so I should just trust the incubator? For the humidity? I hav two Apdoe incubators and they both also read the same humidity
 
Humidity is less important than temperature. Temperature is extremely important. Temperature determines at what rate they develop. You can be off of temperature a little bit and still get a good hatch, it may be early or late. But if it is off too much you can get a horrible hatch.

Nature gave you a lot more leeway with humidity. There are limits, but you get a lot more range and can still get a great hatch. Another thing with humidity is that different ones of us do better with different humidities. Some do better with humidities around 30%, some do better with 50%. The goal is to lose a certain amount of moisture from the egg before hatch. Humidity is one factor in that but there are other factors that affect it.

You can calibrate your hygrometer but that still won't tell you what your best humidity is. By evaluating unhatched eggs and keeping track of results I found my best results with my incubator and my hygrometer in my normal hatching location is around 40%. Other people get different results.

If an incubator gets moved in a commercial hatchery to a different position in the hatching room they go through the same process. By moving it in the same room they may have changed the sweet spot for humidity.
 

New posts New threads Active threads

Back
Top Bottom