Automatic Incubator Controller Xm-18 Operation Manual
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If you start with 30 eggs you will want to keep those eggs in the incubator for 24 hours after they hatch. If you hatch 25, then you will want to keep those 25 for 24 hours. If you hatch 30, keep those for 48 hours.
When you start to incubate, make sure you have a place for the chicks to go to. I don’t mean a house, I mean a place that is warm, and clean, and dry, and has a relatively low amount of light. If you can make it dark, then even better. I use a small shed I built myself. It is not much to look at, but it is the best one I have ever had.
If you hatch 40, then you can keep them for either 72 hours or 96 hours. I have had a few hatching sessions where I have kept them for 72 hours in the incubator. It is just too cold and if the humidity is not very high, the eggs will dry out. I have had many, many hatching sessions where I have kept them for 96 hours. Again, they will dry out if the humidity is not high and if the temperature is low. I have found that the hatching can be more easily done at a higher temperature.
Fourth: Open the incubator door. Start the eggs turning by hand if you are using the small automatic turner. If you are using an automatic egg turner, start the eggs turning as you carefully open the incubator door. Opening the door with the incubator still warm is not a good idea. It will take too long for the eggs to stabilize after being exposed to air. Start the eggs turning when the incubator is at room temperature (about 70 degrees) and the humidity is in the 60-70% range.
Fifth: Leave the container with the chick in the incubator. The chick will need to be in the incubator for at least three hours. It will need to be turned over and over. The incubator door should be fully open.
Third: When the chick is ready, you will notice the chick move into its final hatching position. You can see this in the egg itself, and also by looking at the chick. The chick will raise its head and start trying to push out the egg. The egg has a point of weakness along one side. If you do not remove the chick from the egg soon after it has started hatching, the chick will most likely push the egg out of the incubator.
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