I purchased an incubator by a "Famous" maker. The turner was an option so I bought it too. Both had a thermometer in the box.
Why include an itty bitty thermometer marked in 2 degree increments when the goal is 99.5 degrees?
I tested theses gems of precision against two well regulated and recalibrated food service thermometers that I have from a previous life. A hair under 100 degrees on these thermometers was 92 on one freebie and 94 on the other. Is this common?
Finally, how critical is the difference between 98, 99, 100, and 101 in the incubation process? I know that with humans "normal" 98.6 is not necessarily eaveryone's normal temp, I assume it is the same with chickens.
I am running the temp at a hair under 100 on the good thermos. I think the freebies are going in the trash.
The eggs have been in the incubator for a week, now. They are brown so it is more difficult to see, but it appears that all of them are maturing.
This is my first attempt at incubation. Coincidentally, the next morning after starting these eggs, one of my Wyandottes decided to roost on 10 of her own. This could be fun!
Why include an itty bitty thermometer marked in 2 degree increments when the goal is 99.5 degrees?
I tested theses gems of precision against two well regulated and recalibrated food service thermometers that I have from a previous life. A hair under 100 degrees on these thermometers was 92 on one freebie and 94 on the other. Is this common?
Finally, how critical is the difference between 98, 99, 100, and 101 in the incubation process? I know that with humans "normal" 98.6 is not necessarily eaveryone's normal temp, I assume it is the same with chickens.
I am running the temp at a hair under 100 on the good thermos. I think the freebies are going in the trash.
The eggs have been in the incubator for a week, now. They are brown so it is more difficult to see, but it appears that all of them are maturing.
This is my first attempt at incubation. Coincidentally, the next morning after starting these eggs, one of my Wyandottes decided to roost on 10 of her own. This could be fun!