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Put a smaller fan in. I use my LGs and Hova-Bators as hatchers. They work good that way especially if you do staggered hatches like I do. I put about 100 eggs in the cabinet incubator last week and am putting another 100 + in today.
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Put a smaller fan in. I use my LGs and Hova-Bators as hatchers. They work good that way especially if you do staggered hatches like I do. I put about 100 eggs in the cabinet incubator last week and am putting another 100 + in today.
I have considered using a smaller fan and using it as a hatcher after I build my cabinet incubator.Put a smaller fan in. I use my LGs and Hova-Bators as hatchers. They work good that way especially if you do staggered hatches like I do. I put about 100 eggs in the cabinet incubator last week and am putting another 100 + in today.
I've never had a fan in my LG so I added a PC fan I got off ebay. I guess it's too big and creates too much heat.Brian, you say you haven't had great results with the LG...has that been with or without a fan? By the way all 12 of your Welsummer eggs are growing...it's getting pretty dark in there at day 12. Nine more days.![]()
Yeah over the years I've had mixed results. Sometimes get near 100% with my eggs and other times not so great. Shipped eggs you just never know with them. My biggest concern after I put a new digital thermometer in it was the huge temp swings. It would be 97-98 degrees and an hour later 102 degrees. I always put my incubator in my bedroom closet floor so that the outside environment did not effect the temps of the incubator. But those temps swings are killing me. That's were I've read on here mostly to add the fan. Just need a smaller one I suppose.bwalden-- I use an LG and a homemade henny penny--and I have had mixed results. SO many factors go into getting a great hatch. The best I had was almost 100%; other hatches 0% from shipped eggs.
I understand the DIckeys and the like have greater ability to stay even temps and correct humidity ,etc. LG is a very small unit and subject to the environment around it. After tracking data, I found the the outside weather, eventually effected the room environment, and then the LG. Knowing that allowed me to plan ahead and watch more carefully. 102 weather eventually drove up the temp in the LG--that was the hardest to control without changing the knob!!
Have fun making a new one--I found it very satisfying!!
Yeah it's a funny thing. When I was a kid, I had and LG and a hova-bator both styro chest type incubators. I could put anything in those and hatch them out. Ducks, Geese, Guineas, quail, and of course any sort of chicken egg I could get a hold of. But back then I never worried about temp swings or humidity or fans and any of that stuff. If the little glass thermometer said 99.5 or 100 and my water channels were full I was just as happy as could be. I didn't have the auto egg turner, turned them all by hand 3 times day. I think as an adult we or I tend to over analyze things sometimes. Don't get me wrong, i'm all for a better easier method. I can just remember being disappointed if 1 or 2 eggs out a full incubator (with no auto egg turner) didn't hatch. But that was before I knew anything about shipped eggs.I have had many very good hatches in my LGs. I have had 100% hatches but usually 90 - 95%. The last time it was about 50% but that is because about 50% of the eggs turned out to be not fertile. Of the fertile eggs I lost one (a quitter). I don't worry about the temperature swings as long as they stay around 99 to around 101. The temperature for a still air is recomended to be around 101. A broody usually gets off her eggs once a day to eat, drink and poop. If you can successfully hatch in an LG, you can hatch in anything.
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Well put...