Is there any truth to this humidty?

So no truth in one sex being able to handle change better then the other right? Males and females are equal under incubator conditions?
I dont want to sound bad but if I am messing up Id like to think I am not ruining the ones I want the most.
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(the females)
 
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This does sound like a humidity prob more than temp but would have nothing to do with the ratio of males to females. If there not hatching way early or way late then your temp is good.
 
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The one about the temp has a grain of truth to it. But not with chickens. Some reptiles hatch out different sexes by what temp there incubated at.

Again the discussion is not that they change gender like reptiles do. That's been done to death and is obviously false. I know someone did prove and there was a study linked somewhere that the roosters survived high temperatures better than the pullets so if your temps are high and you have lots of eggs fail to hatch odds are greater that those are pullets. That also makes the odds greater that you hatch more roos than pullets. I am doubting this holds true with humidity though.​
 
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I'm sure you meant to say "humidity", not "temp". I keep mine at 40%-45% the first 18 days, (no water added at all, unless our area humidity drops, then I add just enough to get above 40%) then up to 55%-60% for the last three. My chicks hatch easily, with no help from me. They come out damp rather than dripping wet, not slimy or sticky. Since I started doing it this way, I have better hatches and more vigorous chicks.

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I think over 60%, in most climates, is too wet. It may reduce the amount of oxygen they're getting, i.e., the molecules of water replace the molecules of oxygen, and your chicks may be suffocating. That may be why your hatch rate is so low.

If they seem to have trouble getting out of the shells, you can still help them, so they still have a chance. But if they're suffocating, you won't know until it's too late. I don't use the red plugs in the air vents, at all. Air flow is good.

I doubt the temp is the problem, because they do fine up until you stop turning, (if I understand your posts correctly) which is the last 3 days, and when the humidity goes up. I think maybe you're raising it too much.

I bet that when your hatch rate improves, you'll get closer to 50/50 males and females.
 
Yes I did mean humidty not temp thanks!
OK so I have a hatch on Friday I will bump humidity but not as high as in the past, I will see what happens!
Thanks!
 
Good luck. I hope this helps your hatch.
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