For anyone who is new to hatching. STOP! and think for a minute. It is generally agreed that 50% is a decent hatch rate for shipped eggs, If you know what you are doing AND you have established a routine for YOUR incubator and YOUR area. The best advise anyone has ever given me was to use my own (or local NOT shipped, cheap eggs) to figure it all out. (PRACTICE, PRACTICE, PRACTICE) No matter what you read, no two setups are exactly the same. Buy a good quality forced air incubator (if you are here the Repti Pro is that) set it up with all the thermometers, etc for AT LEAST a week, and watch it. See what quirks it has, what affects it, before you set eggs. Then set your cheap eggs, turn your eggs 3 times a day (WASH your hands before you handle them, every time) or use a turner. Don't try to candle until at least 7 days (especially if you don't know what you're looking at) 10 for darker eggs.
There are lots of people out there who have been hatching for years who lose entire hatches of expensive shipped eggs. Shipping can be hard on eggs, even when the box comes in looking perfect. Air cells get busted, eggs get scrambled, and you would never know to look at the box. Let the eggs settle for a minimum of 4 hours I wait till I go to bed so usually 12 + hours, to room temperature. Do you know how to (gently ) look for a loose air cell? NO? don't bother if the egg is dark, just look for cracks. (Don't try to seal a cracked egg until you get good at the WHOLE routine) Set eggs large end up in the turner or a plastic (easily cleaned) egg crate in the incubator and don't touch them for 5 to 7 days to let the air cells heal, then plug in the turner or gently tilt by hand. Don't lay eggs with possible air cell problems on their sides, leave upright, after the 5-7 days tilt gently from side to side 3 times a day.
To continue to buy shipped eggs before you have at least practiced to the point you are getting good at incubating is just throwing away money. No one can really tell you how to do it, they can only tell you what works for them. Take all that info and work it out.
There are lots of people out there who have been hatching for years who lose entire hatches of expensive shipped eggs. Shipping can be hard on eggs, even when the box comes in looking perfect. Air cells get busted, eggs get scrambled, and you would never know to look at the box. Let the eggs settle for a minimum of 4 hours I wait till I go to bed so usually 12 + hours, to room temperature. Do you know how to (gently ) look for a loose air cell? NO? don't bother if the egg is dark, just look for cracks. (Don't try to seal a cracked egg until you get good at the WHOLE routine) Set eggs large end up in the turner or a plastic (easily cleaned) egg crate in the incubator and don't touch them for 5 to 7 days to let the air cells heal, then plug in the turner or gently tilt by hand. Don't lay eggs with possible air cell problems on their sides, leave upright, after the 5-7 days tilt gently from side to side 3 times a day.
To continue to buy shipped eggs before you have at least practiced to the point you are getting good at incubating is just throwing away money. No one can really tell you how to do it, they can only tell you what works for them. Take all that info and work it out.