(Excuse the dangling participle) How much ventilation do you have going on?
What is your normal or background humidity?
You must add h20 to the air in your incubator to maintain "relative" humidity because as the temperature in your incubator increases the relative humidity decreases.
Are you in fact measuring the humidity INSIDE your incubator or the humidity entering your incubator?
Don't forget that when you add cool eggs to a running incubator the amount of heat needed to overcome the addition of cool objects (the eggs) rises. Perhaps something like a brick in the incubator for a few days before the eggs are introduced will provide a heat sink or heat reserve to prevent the thermostat from giving you wild swings in temperature.
I depend on this type of hydrometer. Not only will it measure relative humidity it also acts as a backup for your thermometer because it uses two thermometers. You'll also need to print off a scale to figure the true relative humidity. In other words, in the world of hatching eggs.... everything is relative..... sort of.
I find that the last 3 days a Wet Bulb reading of around 83 - 85 degrees is ideal. Of course 99 - 100 is about right in a multi level forced air GQF incubator.
I depend on this type of hydrometer. Not only will it measure relative humidity it also acts as a backup for your thermometer.

What is your normal or background humidity?
You must add h20 to the air in your incubator to maintain "relative" humidity because as the temperature in your incubator increases the relative humidity decreases.
Are you in fact measuring the humidity INSIDE your incubator or the humidity entering your incubator?
Don't forget that when you add cool eggs to a running incubator the amount of heat needed to overcome the addition of cool objects (the eggs) rises. Perhaps something like a brick in the incubator for a few days before the eggs are introduced will provide a heat sink or heat reserve to prevent the thermostat from giving you wild swings in temperature.
I depend on this type of hydrometer. Not only will it measure relative humidity it also acts as a backup for your thermometer because it uses two thermometers. You'll also need to print off a scale to figure the true relative humidity. In other words, in the world of hatching eggs.... everything is relative..... sort of.
I find that the last 3 days a Wet Bulb reading of around 83 - 85 degrees is ideal. Of course 99 - 100 is about right in a multi level forced air GQF incubator.
I depend on this type of hydrometer. Not only will it measure relative humidity it also acts as a backup for your thermometer.
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