A few more points on incubation:
Store hatching eggs no longer than 7 days between 40-65f (55-60f is optimal at 75% relative humidity).Remember that cell division in the egg occurs at 67f and above. The first cell division is completed about the time the egg enters the isthmus. Additional cell divisions take place about every 20 minutes; so, by the time of lay, several thousand cells form two layers of cells called a "gastrula." Once the egg is laid it cools and cell division slows or stops until proper environmental conditions are met.
Also remember the day you are setting the eggs in the incubator to allow the eggs to set in the hatching room for 4 to 8 hours to warm up to the relative room temperature of 70f and 70% humidity. This will prevent the cold eggs from sweating in the hot incubator.
One of the biggest failures in a foam hobby incubator is the lack of proper ventilation during the hatching process; particularly with automatic turners. We assume that since the eggs are being turned this is sufficient to tending the eggs. But as the embryo is developing it is taking in oxygen through the pores of the shell and likewise it is expelling carbon dioxide through the shell into the incubator.
If we allow the unit to remain closed for days this is tantamount to asphyxiation and is often the reason for a poor hatch. We must open a foam incubator several times a day albeit it briefly to exchange the air in the unit.
Prior to automatic turners for these small units we naturally opened them twice a day to turn the eggs. One time this rule should be suspended is during a power outage. In this case the unit should remain closed to conserve heat and humidity. The other time this rule is suspended is from the 18th through the 21st days when we stop turning the eggs and close the unit for hatching.