Incubating and discouraged

If there were a problem with the turner, it wouldn't prevent development of a fertile egg unless it were somehow jerking the eggs around and scrambling them. You'd more likely have a turner that was moving too slow and would have problems with embryos sticking to one side of the egg. I would do some observation: check on the turner every half hour and note the position of the racks. I think my turner does a full turn in two hours.
My turner does a full turn in about 30 seconds lol
 
A full turn in 30 seconds is too fast I think, should be turning a lot slower than that
That’s what I’m thinking. I had put it on a lamp timer so it wasn’t running 24/7 but the lamp timer ran in 15min increments.
I’m trying to decide if I should turn manually next time (2-3 times a day is about all I could manage), or if I should try putting a dimmer switch on the turner to slow it down.
 
I don't have an auto-turner in my incubators since they are DIY cooler-baters. I turn by hand about 3 times a day; once in the morning before work around 7:30, after work around 5:30, and at night around 10-11pm. I had better results when turning 3 times per day than 2 times.

Maybe take your turner out and test it and get it to the point where it turns 1 time per 2-4 hours or so, that would probably be good.
 
So i scanned this tbh. I see your concerned about your eggs. Just curious why your humidity is 40 percent?

Talking with James Marie Farms they recommend 50-55 percent humidity temperature at 100. He actually recommends a dry hatch meaning dont raise humidity. for a wet hatch 60 for humidity. This is the same method i use. Could it be that temp being low by 1 degrees and humidity being low by 10-15 percent is causing an issue? my turner turns 1x per hr and only takes 30 seconds or so could be a different style i guess.
 
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So i scanned this tbh. I see your concerned about your eggs. Just curious why your humidity is 40 percent?

Talking with James Marie Farms they recommend 50-55 percent humidity temperature at 100. He actually recommends a dry hatch meaning dont raise humidity. for a wet hatch 60 for humidity. This is the same method i use. Could it be that temp being low by 1 degrees and humidity being low by 10-15 percent is causing an issue? my turner turns 1x per hr and only takes 30 seconds or so could be a different style i guess.
I was under the impression 40% was recommended. It’s at about 65% now for lockdown.
So you don’t raise humidity at all for a dry hatch?
 
I don't have an auto-turner in my incubators since they are DIY cooler-baters. I turn by hand about 3 times a day; once in the morning before work around 7:30, after work around 5:30, and at night around 10-11pm. I had better results when turning 3 times per day than 2 times.

Maybe take your turner out and test it and get it to the point where it turns 1 time per 2-4 hours or so, that would probably be good.
Ok I’ll mess with it. If I can’t get it working right I’ll hand turn similar to the schedule you use :)
 
People say a lot of things tbh. Ive seen people say 40-70 percent. I would look at your sources. By no means am i implying i should be your source. When and if i have questions i contact bigger well known sources like James Marie Farms and ask them. I find the guy who ships out 38,000 + eggs a day and hatches more than probably all of us on this forum to be a more reliable knowledgeable source. This is not to insult anyone here. a lot of information here is right on. and many aspects of what we do is open to a variable. Some things like egg hatching are pretty specific for good results. Robert the owner of James Marie Farm states: " 50-55 percent humidity is perfect for coturnix. As for raising humidity you can but 60 percent would be max id do. " I have done wet hatches at 60 and dry hatches as well both are perfectly plausible. I am not saying that your temp and humidity is your problem. I am simply saying its a very good possibility.
 
People say a lot of things tbh. Ive seen people say 40-70 percent. I would look at your sources. By no means am i implying i should be your source. When and if i have questions i contact bigger well known sources like James Marie Farms and ask them. I find the guy who ships out 38,000 + eggs a day and hatches more than probably all of us on this forum to be a more reliable knowledgeable source. This is not to insult anyone here. a lot of information here is right on. and many aspects of what we do is open to a variable. Some things like egg hatching are pretty specific for good results. Robert the owner of James Marie Farm states: " 50-55 percent humidity is perfect for coturnix. As for raising humidity you can but 60 percent would be max id do. " I have done wet hatches at 60 and dry hatches as well both are perfectly plausible. I am not saying that your temp and humidity is your problem. I am simply saying its a very good possibility.
Fair enough, I’m very new at this and I’m learning constantly and appreciate any input :)
I’ll triple check my thermometers after this batch is done and I’ll see about trying a humidity closer to 50-55.
 
It helps to start with fertile eggs.
I am sorry things aren't going so well.

Hopefully something hatches.
:fl
 

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