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THE STANDARD 1 DOES NOT... THE EGGS FIT INSIDE IT AND SINCE IT IS AN OCTAGON SHAPED TUBE YOU SIMPLY ROLL/ TURN THE ENTIRE UNIT FROM 1 FLAT SPOT TO ANOTHER 2-3 TIMES A DAY... SO YOU ARE HAND TURNING, BUT ITS NOT LIKE ACTUALLY HAND TURNING IN ANOTHER TYPE OF INCUBATOR. THEY SELL AN AUTOTURN CRADLE FOR THEM BUT IT ADDS TO THE PRICE AND ISNT NECESSARY WITH THE OCTAGON MODELS.... GO TO THEIR WEBSITE AND CHECK THEM OUT
http://www.brinsea.com/
I have 2 of the
Brinsea Ocatgon 20 ECO's - one with the optional auto-turning cradle and one without that I'm hand-turning 3 or 5 times a day. I have 99 Coturnix eggs split between them right now. The temperature and humidity are exactly the same in both of them at the moment. So, we'll see if having the auto-turner improves the hatch rate at all!
And just a quick thing about the LG 'bator - I have one of those too, it was given to my by a friend who wanted me to hatch some chicks for him last spring when all my other 'bator's were full. The LG does NOT hold a stable temperature. With the Brinseas, I can adjust them to 99.5 and they hold steady for the entire incubation period, even when I'm changing the humidity around or when we adjust the heat or the air conditioning in the room. With the LG, if you turn the heat in your house up a few degrees, the 'bator's going to spike up in temperature. If you turn the air conditioning on, the 'bator temperature drops. And then it's a pain in the butt to try to adjust the thing back to the correct temperature, and it ends up swinging all over the place. The ONE time I incubated in an LG, I only had a 25% hatch rate (compared to a 95% rate in my
Brinsea's that same week) AND one of the chicks hatched with his intestines spilling outside of his body (which I believe was due to the numerous temperature spikes during incubation).
So, like everyone else said, the
Brinsea's are unbeatable. For the price, you have a reliable incubator that'll hatch pretty much any bird species for you. This is my first run with quail eggs in mine (a quick candling last night showed that there's
something growing in most of the eggs), but I've been hatching chickens and ducks in them for over a year now - almost every egg that's developed has hatched, and all the birds that hatched have been perfectly healthy.