using heating cable in incubator

poissonguppy

Hatching
11 Years
Apr 6, 2008
5
0
7
Hey everyone.

Inspired by some of the homemade incubators I've seen here, I wanted to try to make my own, but instead of using a light, I was wondering if I could use heating cable.

I'm thinking it would be even more accurate because then I could line the entire incubator with it instead of just one corner.

I just wanted some feedback on the idea. And if it does sound okay, does anyone know how I would hook it up to the thermostat? Or is it just the same as a lightbulb?

Thanks.
 
Quote:
I use a string of Christmas lights in my homemade bator (The outdor larger bulbs) not the thiny ones.

You can use any amount of the bulbs since they are connected in parallel (just cut the cord with excess bulbs).

Even heat, the most reliable heat (if 1 burns out it will not affect much the whole operation, as you will notice a burned bulb it and replace it soon without any loss of your hatch).

I also use a dimmer switch for precise control of the total wattage of my setup.

One bulb is either 5W or 7W (depends on type) so instead of 60W standard bulb you use string of 10 Christmas bulbs.

My homemade bator beats the pants of any commercial styrobator, (no deadly spikes, no babysitting) and I believe it is as good as any cabinet bator, however I do not have a cabinet bator to compare with.

I can put two 42 egg turners in it.
 
Last edited:
Hiya poissonguppy,
I made a experimental bator from a foam veggie box and used a 80w heat cord.
In Australia normal light globes are being banned and replaced with the flouro type.
It does heat well, except it has draw backs.
A when the thermostat switches off, the cord retains heat for a while and the temp in the bator keeps climbing.
b It cools slowly after the thermo kicks off and
C the thermo kicks it in very quickly after the set point is reached to turn back on.

However if you are patient you can get the average between low and high set points exact on 99.5 f

Regards
Trev
 
Stromberg's book on incubating/hatching illustrates a (presumably older and no longer available) kit setup that provides a wafer thermostat and heating cable (strung in triangular shape across top part of inside of the incubator 'box', which you provide); sp evidently it has been done.

Gee whiz, the christmas tree light string sounds like a good idea... I may remake my incubator after this setting no matter what happens and that's a tempting thought.

Pat
 
Quote:
I use a string of Christmas lights in my homemade bator (The outdor larger bulbs) not the thiny ones.

You can use any amount of the bulbs since they are connected in parallel (just cut the cord with excess bulbs).

Even heat, the most reliable heat (if 1 burns out it will not affect much the whole operation, as you will notice a burned bulb it and replace it soon without any loss of your hatch).

I also use a dimmer switch for precise control of the total wattage of my setup.

One bulb is either 5W or 7W (depends on type) so instead of 60W standard bulb you use string of 10 Christmas bulbs.

My homemade bator beats the pants of any commercial styrobator, (no deadly spikes, no babysitting) and I believe it is as good as any cabinet bator, however I do not have a cabinet bator to compare with.

I can put two 42 egg turners in it.

pics? luv to see.
 
I use a string of Christmas lights in my homemade bator (The outdor larger bulbs) not the thiny ones.

You can use any amount of the bulbs since they are connected in parallel (just cut the cord with excess bulbs).

Even heat, the most reliable heat (if 1 burns out it will not affect much the whole operation, as you will notice a burned bulb it and replace it soon without any loss of your hatch).

I also use a dimmer switch for precise control of the total wattage of my setup.

One bulb is either 5W or 7W (depends on type) so instead of 60W standard bulb you use string of 10 Christmas bulbs.

My homemade bator beats the pants of any commercial styrobator, (no deadly spikes, no babysitting) and I believe it is as good as any cabinet bator, however I do not have a cabinet bator to compare with.

I can put two 42 egg turners in it.

Holy cow - that's BRILLIANT!
ep.gif
Who doesn't have an attic filled with partial strings of Christmas lights!? You HAVE to enter your bator in the homemade bator contest - that is brilliant!!!!!


I think we only have the small strings, though. I'm wondering who might still have Christmas lights in April, hmmmm. I wanted to build a bigger bator.....
 
Quote:
Holy cow - that's BRILLIANT!
ep.gif
Who doesn't have an attic filled with partial strings of Christmas lights!? You HAVE to enter your bator in the homemade bator contest - that is brilliant!!!!!


I think we only have the small strings, though. I'm wondering who might still have Christmas lights in April, hmmmm. I wanted to build a bigger bator.....

Maybe a Christmas Tree Shop might have some now, or ask your neighbors and friends.
thumbsup.gif
 
Okay I considered heat cable but went with flexwatt heat tape(reptile supply), which I like but which is pricy. I like the even radiant heat but it needed a small light supplement because mine is in a metal cooler and the light picks up quickly if the outside temp drops and starts to affect the bator. I put a halogen puck light on a dimmer, that worked out.

Christmas lights just absolutely floats my boat. Going to have to play with that in the next one. An added bonus would be no high heat source like a normal light bulb for a chick to get burned on or to need shielding to prevent cooked eggs. Nice.

I left the little foam bators immediately after having one. Too shallow, I'm a clutz and got burned on the darn upper element too many times to count. I was hand turning. Cramped and irritating. Grr.

My next project is a much larger bator, I've discovered this screaming need to hatch too many eggs. Well, Laura thinks it's too many, I think that it's perfectly normal.

Thanks for asking - these threads always rock.
 
Quote:
Holy cow - that's BRILLIANT!
ep.gif
Who doesn't have an attic filled with partial strings of Christmas lights!? You HAVE to enter your bator in the homemade bator contest - that is brilliant!!!!!


I think we only have the small strings, though. I'm wondering who might still have Christmas lights in April, hmmmm. I wanted to build a bigger bator.....

Maybe a Christmas Tree Shop might have some now, or ask your neighbors and friends.
thumbsup.gif


I am going to take pictures and post them by weekend.
 
Quote:
Maybe a Christmas Tree Shop might have some now, or ask your neighbors and friends.
thumbsup.gif


I am going to take pictures and post them by weekend.

I can't wait to see this!!! You have to get this idea out there - it is absolutely amazing! So much more economical than heat tape and a perfect application for an incubator - not dangerous for the chicks and if one bulb blows it won't ruin the hatch. BRILLIANT!
 

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