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Think Again on the Brinsea. Read my earlier post. Sometimes you get what you pay for, but in the case of the Brinsea it is not entirely true!My input isn't very helpful as I'm just on my first hatch, but thought I'd contribute what I know anyway:
Little Giant #9200 styrofoam incubator, no fan, no turner, no humidity measure or control. I bought it used.
While I was testing it before adding eggs, a tiny turn of the temperature knob produced a huge swing in temperature -- from 99 to 105 degrees. When I got it at 99 degrees again, I left it there rather than trying for a slightly warmer temp.
I open it about six times a day to turn the eggs by hand. I put a washcloth under the eggs on top the wire mesh to cushion them when turning. I also added several small canning jars of water to moderate temperature swings. While the temperature drop is considerable during turning, it does stabilize in under an hour.
Ten days into the hatch I'm surprised that quite a few of the eggs are alive. One had a blood ring. Many look clear, but that might be because I don't have a powerful enough light to see the veins through the brown and green shells. And many have visible veining and a tiny embryo.
I don't know how the hatch will go from here, but I'm happy that any of the eggs are still alive. I don't mind turning the eggs by hand, but I do want an incubator that gives the eggs the best possible chance of hatching. Ideally I'd get a Lyon Roll-X with automatic turner, or a Brinsea Octagon 20 Advance -- not currently within my budget. ;-)