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So I've seen people said to use a PC fan.
I have the newer digital 9300 and have a fan that WILL plug into the adapter port avail on the control board. Issue is it pushes around 20-24 cfm. I've seen some people say 10-14, some say 20, some say they just put the PC fan in.
How much air do I want moving? I know it will cause more EVAP with more air movement and such.
Or should I use a cell phone charger like you've folks show? I have one with a fan already that I use for my yeast starters for brewing. (Darn chickens won't leave me alone on boil day, love the grains)
Just plugged mine in and have it running still air to test the temps and such. Going to do some the mods I see (wash bottles, jars).
The type of temperature sensor your controller is using may have issues detecting accurately due to humidity, or the controller itself may not be calibrated properly. The temp controller I'm using is using a thermistor with a 50 millisecond response time. The other one I worked with was using a type K thermocouple, but due to the coating on it developed temperature drift on humidity levels over 50%. Still don't understand why, but have a few ideas about it. Did you try ice bath calibrating it to see what it measured?
This is digital thoughIt keeps spiking today and I don't know what to do.![]()
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If the digital thermostat isn't a proportional or PID type, it is using a "bang bang" type relay to switch on and off power to the heater. That means the heater gets the max power whenever it is on, so it will heat up pretty fast. Then after the power turns off it is still emitting the residual heat into the incubator. Sometimes you just have to adjust it so that the temperature between the relay turning on and the max temp it hits after turning off averages out to the incubating temp you want. It is also common for the temp to continue to drop a little bit after the heater first turns on as it takes a few seconds to heat up.
For my "bang bang" relay controller, I had it set to kick on at 37.1 degree C and kick off at 37.4 degree C. The temp after accounting for the cool and max temp hit averaged out to 37.5 degree C. Had a beautiful hatch, but I'm changing to a PID controller to remove that temperature swing and increase stability.