Read the first and subsequent posts closely - Over the past three days I have gleaned enough info to use to save over 10 chicks from my bator that would have died in the shell due to humidity/membrane/positioned on side of shell issues. My own faulty incubation problems, not theirs. I used saran wrap and gauze, hours of wrapping and resettling, drying of the yolk/umbilical, an "intensive care" bator and the "critical care/hospital" bator, etc....those babies, one at a time, are NOT dead like the ones I "waited" for - who died inside the shell - because they never pipped out and suffocated. I guess you have as good a chance of killing them as you do of giving them a chance to live? The choice is yours, I prefer to be proactive, if it's going to die anyhow? Wait for them to die, as nature intended? Bators are not natural - we already messed that part up. Do what you think is best, but intervention can save some beautiful chicks.