How much humidity do eggs put off?

sideWing

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I got my bator setup long before the eggs arrived and I had the humidity pegged at 45% I'm using a DIY bator and I have a cup of water hanging in the bator. It's a styro bator made from frozen meat shipping box. Much thicker than a styro cooler. I hatched over 45 lizard eggs in it.

I put the eggs in and 24 hours later the humidity was at 60%. I covered about 80% of the top of the cup and I got it to go down to 55% humidity. I covered about 90% and now its down to 50% humidity. The hygrometer is a digital hygrometer and I have no idea how accurate it is. I will measure and mark air sack to monitor, but I'm wondering how much humidity the eggs themselves put off?
 
That's a tough one... We know eggs loose 13/15% of they're weight over the 21 days incubation period... How much (or even how) that translates into humidity percentage in the air...
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hu.gif


To calibrate your hygrometer (or just know the reading deviation if it's non-adjustable), do the salt-and-water test... https://www.backyardchickens.com/t/285284/calibrate-your-hygrometer-two-methods

Cheers
 
If you have 40 sixty gram eggs in the incubator, and they lose 13% of their weight during incubation, that's 312 grams of water over 21 days, or 15 grams a day. That's quite a bit of water.
 
I wish I would have done that before the incubation.
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Well...I guess no harm in taking out your hygrometer for a few hours to run a calibration test... Humidity % is not going to change abruptly, if you keep the conditions inside your incubator unchanged.

Cheers
 

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