Extreme condensation in egg box
Hi all, I made a cooler incubator and I am finding that the inside of the egg box lid has a crazy amount of condensation. I am wondering if this will affect the eggs at all or cause them to get moldy. I am using hatch rite and it doesn't seem to be getting any wetter than it was.http://img.tapatalk.com/d/14/01/29/zyne8aqu.jpghttp://img.tapatalk.com/d/14/01/29/eju3evyn.jpg
Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
Re: Extreme condensation in egg box
If more than a drop comes out from your mix then yes it is to wet, other than that condensation build up is normal. And I used to have a standing water incubator before my girl re absorbed and had time to make a different one. Add salt to help prevent the standing water from getting moldy.
Re: Extreme condensation in egg box
Quote:
Originally Posted by
kylearmbar
If more than a drop comes out from your mix then yes it is to wet, other than that condensation build up is normal. And I used to have a standing water incubator before my girl re absorbed and had time to make a different one. Add salt to help prevent the standing water from getting moldy.
He's using hatchrite so it should be good to go right out of the bag...no mixing necessary...
Re: Extreme condensation in egg box
Thanks everybody, I knew that there would be condensation I was just surprised by how much there was. Is adding salt to the water a common practice with these types of incubators? I have never heard of it
I am using an aquarium heater with a herpstat 1
Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
Re: Extreme condensation in egg box
Quote:
Originally Posted by
JohnMcD
Thanks everybody, I knew that there would be condensation I was just surprised by how much there was. Is adding salt to the water a common practice with these types of incubators? I have never heard of it
I am using an aquarium heater with a herpstat 1
Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
having salt water come into contact with the eggs sounds risky. if you are sure that this wont happen, why not add salt. it wont help with the condensation, but can help prevent bacterias from growing in the water, if you add enough salt. but then, if you are sure salt water wont come into contact with the eggs, then water with bacteria also wont come into contact with the eggs, so i dont see the point. clean water should be just fine.
anyway, i can see your setup and design working fine just as it is. the only question i have: dont the eggs need a bit of fresh air every now and then? even while there are no breathing lungs yet, eggs still have some metabolism going on that requires a little bit of oxygen and releases a little bit of CO2. but im not sure.