Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.
Ah, red is alcohol...mercury is silver.
I comparison test (or calibrate, if you insist) my bator therms against a human oral thermometer(they have a regulated tolerance range for accuracy of 0.2-0.5(IIRC) degrees) in a cup of approx. 100F cup of water. Then take the notes already mentioned for accurate readings.
IMO it's not sensible to calibrate to 32*.
Why not? Serious question, not trying to pick a fight or anything. I use the 32 degrees method because when you melt ice in water like that, due to the way phase changing works, the water HAS to be 32 F due to the laws of physics, no guessing. The 100 degrees way you would need to have a thermometer you know to be accurate to be able to check the other thermometers against. With the 32 F way, you don't need an accurate thermometer. That's why I suggest that way, but if there's a reason that doing it with 100 F water is better, I'd like to know so I can change what I recommend![]()
Pyxis, I agree with you that when calibrating to 32*, the ice bath will give you an accurate calibration at 32*. That's what the law of physics states. But... we are not incubating at 32*... I don't consider your questioning me about my rationale to be picking a fight at all!
I'm happy to tell you why I won't bother to calibrate to 32*. And, my thought process is based on my limited understanding, I have no other reason. This is my thought: If a bulb thermometer is accurate at 32*, that's just great. But, accuracy for good incubation needs to be at 100*. So... if a bulb thermometer has any variation in the diameter of the capillary that holds the liquid, the calibration may be accurate at 32*, but may be off at 100* where the temp reading is critical. Now, I don't know how digital thermometers work, but... I follow the same logic. If it's accurate at 32*, that does not necessarily mean that it will be accurate at 100*. Medical grade digital thermometers are guaranteed to be accurate to +/- .2*. Even the cheap ones are guaranteed to be accurate to .5*. So, I'll accept that guarantee, and continue to calibrate to 100*. I add my personal incubation experience as validation: After 4 years of incubation, my hatches have been spot on in terms of the majority of the hatch occurring on day # 21. The only time this has not been so is when I know that my temp has been off due to issues with thermostat, fan, and air temp regulation.
I question the accuracy of any thermometer other than a medical (human) thermometer.I use digital ones made for reptiles and aquarium thermometers, both of which need to be very accurate or the animals you're using them for could die, so that probably helps