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- #11
I can try, I don't think I'm going to be hatching till January though. I already have three thermometers if you count the built in one, and I purchased this one because of it's great reviews and narrow range. The two hens that had the most dead eggs are 10-11 months old and their rooster is only 7-8 months old. I had another rooster who is 20 months old, but I can tell which chicks were his (he's a Dominique, so all of his offspring are barred, in other words black with a white spot on their head). My whole flock is under 2 years of age though, and that is the when fertility starts going down I believe.So maybe the best thing to do to get this particular incubators issues ironed out would be to hatch a few less eggs and change up your settings and see. We know the temp was too high with the early hatchers but I would still be concerned with it being still too high and causing deaths. I lost half the batch of quail eggs (at lockdown) to a temp issue when I was using my newest incubator only to find with a THIRD thermometer that it was way too hot.
not sure what your thermometer is like; I don’t like the ones that I can’t fuss with somewhat. Lol. I use the probe type meant for reptiles. They’re cheap enough you can put a few of them in there and have a relatively accurate average in there. I use the ice water test with those and it seems to work fine. Do you have a known accurate thermometer you can compare it to?
you would have taken care of variables by rotating the eggs through the incubator so I doubt that’s the issue.
I guess the next question is the age of your breeders. Older hens and roosters have been known to throw more problem eggs/chicks or have decreased fertility so something like that may be possible if they’re older. I forget the actual percentage numbers for different ages, but as same as any other species, the older they are, the higher the chances of problems. It wouldn’t be uncommon for one or two eggs from any given hen to not hatch, especially in not “ideal” incubation conditions, but definitely interesting that there were so many from those few ladies.
I don’t know that the later stage turning would have caused late deaths with chicks not even internally pipping. There’s been plenty of people that have had chicks hatch early in the turner with no assistance at all.![]()
I trust my new thermometer even though I haven't calibrated it, and I don't have a 'known' accurate one because I'm not even sure if I can rely on the freeze test. What makes for a 'known' accurate thermometer? And if it reads 32 in the ice water, does that mean it will read at 99.5 accurately? Just trying to make sure.
Here is a link to my newest thermometer. https://www.ruralking.com/spot-chec...fr80KukvdKY_WRqvWHh1272BhGXy5uZRoCbc0QAvD_BwE