Styrofoam Forced Air Egg Incubator V 2
Styrofoam Forced Air Egg Incubator V 2
Table of Contents
Step 2: Put lamp assembly (heat source) & thermostat into cooler . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8
Step 6: Create a 'safe' area for the light bulb, fan, and thermostat . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 15
Related Instructables . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 19
Comments . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 20
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Intro: Styrofoam Forced Air Egg Incubator v 2.0
In order to hatch fertile chicken, duck, turkey or other domestic poultry eggs, you need a broody mother bird, or an incubator. If you have the money for it, you can buy
extremely functional styrofoam incubators for just over $100 (and smaller, 3-4 egg "classroom" dome models for less yet). And of course you can always pay a lot, lot
more. But if you don't want to spend that kind of money, it is still possible to put together a functional "forced air" box incubator at home for just a few dollars, using items
you may have around the house or can buy readily at any grocery, thrift, or drugstore (except for the thermostat, which you'll find at Home Depot or other hardware
store.)
My total cost for the incubator in this Instructable was about $30. Your cost may be less if you can salvage or re-purpose parts you already have around the house.
Estimated assembly time once you have all the bits together: about 2 hours
Tools:
Serrated knife or hacksaw blade
Duct tape
Electrical tape
Scissors
Tin snips
Leather gloves
Wire cutters
Wire stripper
Sharpie pen or other marker (to mark on the wire and cooler, not the eggs)
Vacuum cleaner
Pencil (to mark the eggs if desired)
Materials:
1 styrofoam ice chest, the thicker-walled the better (I got my Omaha Steak shipping box free by asking on Craigslist.)
1 bottle lamp assembly (Home Depot, about $10 - I salvaged mine from a lamp from a thrift store for $6)
1 lower-element, single pole water heater thermostat ($7.57 at Home Depot)
1 25 W bulb
1 12 Volt transformer (from any defunct electronic device)
1 PC Core fan (scavenged or a dollar or two - I got mine from PC Recycle for $2)
1 plastic (preferred) or glass from an inexpensive picture frame ( I salvaged mine for $1 at a thrift)
1 shallow dish for humidity
Wire hardware cloth (about $9/roll if you don't have leftovers from another project)
Aluminum foil
Image Notes
1. Completed view. This is actually my prototype. I made a second one and
documented each step for this Instructable.
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Image Notes
1. This is a 'water wiggler', also sometimes called a 'water snake' or a 'water
weasel'. I buy mine at a local toy store. Some people find them at Wal*Mart - call
around. The fluid-filled Wiggler is a surrogate for an egg. If the temperature
inside the Wiggler is 99-100F, then the temp inside your eggs will be, too.
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Image Notes
1. PC Recycle sells these for about $2, if you don't have one lying around.
Image Notes
1. This is the Wal*Mart brand, but Home Depot also sells a similar one. The
probe goes into the Water Wiggler and registers the "outside" temperature.
Image Notes
1. This is the probe that goes into the Water Wiggler. It registers "internal egg
temperature" for you rather than outdoor temperature.
2. This number is the relative humidity.
3. This number is the temperature of the 'outside' probe (in this case, my
garage).
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Image Notes
1. Home Depot, $7.57
Image Notes
1. Wire nuts, wire cutter, straight-slot screwdriver, wire stripper, and electrical
tape. Not shown: hacksaw blade or serrated knife.
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Image Notes
1. A simple, single-pole, lower thermostat for a water heater. They will hold a
remarkably steady temperature based on air temp in the cooler. The bracket
provided in the packaging is not necessary.
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Image Notes
1. 1/4" galvanized hardware cloth. tin snips, and sturdy leather work gloves.
With your serrated knife or hacksaw blade, cut inside the marked line at least 1/2", so that the window overlaid on it has a solid area of support, all the way around.
Tape in place with duct tape. I use yellow because it's what I had in my garage.
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Image Notes
1. Window taped in place.
Step 2: Put lamp assembly (heat source) & thermostat into cooler
Cut a small hole in the end (or side near the end) of the cooler, about 4" above the bottom. The lamp assembly runs through this.
Some lamp assemblies have a hole in the side of the base of the lamp, through which a wire can be run. Mine did not, so I had to drill a hole.
Split the two halves of the long wire. Cut the ribbed half off another 8" and reserve that piece. and strip all ends about 1/2".
Wire according to the diagram below. The wiring diagram has been borrowed and adapted from AK Michelle's 'Home Made Brooder' page at BackYardChickens.com.
EXERCISE ALL DUE CAUTION WHEN WORKING WITH THE LAMP ASSEMBLY. ELECTRICITY CAN AND WILL INJURE OR KILL YOU. LEAVE UNPLUGGED
WHEN WORKING WITH BARE WIRES.
Run the wire from the outside, through the lamp base, through the wall of the cooler. You will now be working with the wire inside the cooler. Tie a half-hitch in the wire
where it will sit in the cup-shaped base of the lamp assembly. Run the long, non-ribbed wire out through the side-hole in the cup base. Pull snug. Attach the stripped end
of the non-ribbed wire to terminal #1 on the thermostat
Run the reserved piece of wire (I have used a piece of orange 12ga wire for this, so you can see where it's going) through the side-hole in the cup also. Attach the outside
end to terminal #2 on the thermostat.
Attach the stripped end of the ribbed wire to the silver terminal on the lamp base.
Attach the stripped end of the 8" piece of wire (coming from terminal #2 on the thermostat - orange, in my pictures) to the brass terminal on the lamp base.
Put as little wire inside the cup base as possible, for snug fit when you assemble the lamp assembly. Press the rest of the lamp assembly together. Screw a 25W bulb
into the lamp socket.
Put a piece of electrical tape over the terminals on the thermostat, for safety.
Plug in. If you've done it right, the light will turn on. If you've done it wrong you'll probably have a circuit breaker pop. If the breaker didn't pop and the light didn't come on,
check the switch on the lamp assembly, which might be turned off. If both of those fail, try a new light bulb.
At this point it is useful to turn the thermostat as close to 99F as you can estimate, put the lid on the cooler, and leave it alone for a few hours. If all is well, the light will
turn on and off as the temperature in the cooler reaches or drops below the desired temperature.
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Image Notes Image Notes
1. Pieces of the lamp assembly. 1. The 'cup' base of the lamp assembly, with a hole drilled to run wire to the
thermostat and back. If you buy the Home Depot 'bottle' lamp assembly, it will
already have a hole on the side.
Image Notes
1. Interior view of cup base of lamp assembly, with wires inserted. You'll need to
Image Notes pull them through longer for the sake of working with them, then draw the wire
1. Exterior of cooler, with lamp assembly inserted through wall. This one is far down tight to assemble the whole. Also please note: I have not yet cut off the 8" of
too long, but still functional. wire that will return from the thermostat.
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Image Notes
1. Lamp assembly and thermostat, as it appears in real life. See how the orange
Image Notes
wire, and a brown wire, run out through the side of the cup base to the thermostat
1. Original drawings & wiring information by AK Michelle @
and back. See how short the pieces of wire are inside the cup. See the
BackyardChickens.com, text replaced by me for clarity. 'electrician's knot' in the wire inside the cup.
Image Notes
1. Lamp assembly, ready to push together, with wiring in place.
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Image Notes
1. A better view of the 'electrician's knot' and the wires running out the hole in the
side of the cup base.
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Image Notes
1. Fiat lux!
I have used a hot glue gun to attach square legos to the back side of my fan, as spacers, so the fan isn't smack up against the wall of the cooler. You might use a bit of
the leftover styrofoam from the lid, if you like, instead. For this fan, I have tried attaching it to the wall with bits of wire hanger. I find this allows a lot of vibration and thus
more noise than necessary, but I have not yet found a tape that will stick to styrofoam, so there you go. You can experiment with how to best attach the fan to the wall. I
like to attach mine so it blows across/above the light bulb, moving the warmed air.
Cut the jack off the end of the power cords on the fan. Poke a hole through the wall of the cooler, just large enough to run the wires through to the outside. Strip the ends
of the red and black wires, about 1/2".
For power, you need a 12V transformer. Any old 12V 'wall wart' transformer will do: I have used one from a long-defunct baby monitor, and one from a phone charger.
Cut the jack off and separate the two halves of the wire (You will end up with black and black with white stripe, or similar). Separate the two a few and strip the ends
about 1/2".
Plain black goes to red; black with white stripe, goes to black. Yellow is ground and gets nothing, although you may wish to just put a bit of electrical tape over the end
anyway. Twist the stripped wires together and cover with wire nuts or with electrical tape. Plug in and test. It should run smoothly and near-silently.
Image Notes
1. Fan installed using bits of wire. You may use duct tape, Gorilla Tape, or any
other method you find works for you.
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Image Notes
1. Lego spacers to keep the fan from resting directly against the wall. I used a
hot glue gun to attach these to the fan.
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Step 4: Calibrate your thermometer/hygrometer
Mix 1/2 cup of salt and 1/4 cup of water to make a thick slurry. Put your thermometer/hygrometer into a large zip-close plastic bag with this cup of salt slurry, close
completely, and leave at room temperature for several hours or overnight. Do not let the water actually touch the hygrometer. If at the end of this time the relative humidity
inside the bag is 75%, you're home free. (You should read it while it is still in the closed bag, because the second you take it out, the humidity in your house will begin to
affect the reading.)
If the humidity is higher or lower, however, you will need to make a note of the % by which the hygrometer deviates, and always remember to mentally add or subtract
that percentage during incubation to maintain the desired humidity:
For example, if your humidity reading is 80%, you must always subtract 5% from whatever you see on the hygrometer. If it says 40%, you will know the real humidity is
35%.
Image Notes
1. 1/2 C salt, 1/4 C water
2. Hygrometer inside sealed plastic bag, NOT touching any of the salt slurry. Leave for 8-12 hours.
Measure the dimensions of the bottom of your cooler. I say it this way because some coolers (like mine) are narrower at the bottom than the top, and if you only measure
the top and make a wire floor from those measurements, it won't fit. It may also, if you are using styrofoam, simply tear up the inside of the cooler, trying to fit it in there.
Fold down the sides to a height of 2", so that the corners meet neatly. and the floor is as flat as you can make it. Place an empty, shallow water dish on the bottom of the
cooler, then Install the wire floor over and above it, with the thermostat on top of the wire floor at the same level the eggs will lie. Make sure the water dish underneath is
shallow enough that it doesn't interfere with the lay of the wire floor. DO NOT ADD WATER YET.
Image Notes
1. This is how it should look, folded and put into the bottom of the cooler.
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Image Notes
1. 2" corner cut from the sheet of hardware cloth
Step 6: Create a 'safe' area for the light bulb, fan, and thermostat
Cut a piece of hardware cloth about 8" tall. Cover the top edge with duct tape. Bend to form an enclosure for the light bulb and thermostat.
Put a piece of aluminum foil between the light bulb and the wire, to deflect the direct heat away from the nearest eggs. You want a steady temperature on every egg.
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Image Notes
1. Note: this does not show the aluminum foil in place. You may use tape or heavy staples or long pieces of wire to fasten the enclosure in place, or else build it rigid
enough that chicks can't move it. (Not difficult to do.)
Eggs "breathe" and developing chicks need lots of oxygen. You need adequate air exchange inside the incubator for the chicks to live and grow.
You may have noticed in my intro, that I also put a ventilation hole in the lid, and covered it partially with duct tape. I find this lets me regulate humidity better without
opening the lid (can uncover the top hole, as rising heat carries excess humidity away until the hygrometer reads the desired number, then cover partially and check
frequently at first to make sure it holds the % humidity you want.)
Image Notes
1. Ventilation holes. 2 of these are plugged; one is open. Two on the opposite side are open (not shown). One on the lid is open about 1/4".
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Step 8: Add humidity
This is a very simple step - effectively, you fill the dish in the bottom of the cooler/incubator with warm water AFTER YOU HAVE FINISHED ALL OTHER
CONSTRUCTION . You want the temperature to be as close to 99.5F as you can provide, with the humidity to be about 50% for the first 18 days, and about 70% for the
last 3 days. This increased humidity at the end is so that when the chicks pip their shells, the membrane inside the shell stays lubricated, and the chicks can move around
inside and 'zip' their way out of the shell. If the membrane dries out, the chick can become stuck and simply die in the shell. Proper humidity therefore can literally be a
matter of life and death.
If your humidity remains too high despite fiddling with the 'exhaust' ventilation hole in the lid, you may need to remove surface area (ie, take out the large wide dish, and
put in one with a smaller bottom/less surface area for evaporation). NEVER LET THE BOWL GO DRY. It may help to leave a couple bits of styrofoam floating on the
surface of the water. When you look in, make sure they're still floating - you'll be able to see the water level by where they are.
Water also functions as a thermal mass, helping to regulate the temperature inside the incubator.
For further information on the scientific technicalities of incubating eggs, I refer you to the "Now What?" page at www.PoultryHelp.com
Image Notes
1. I believe this is Gladware. It is about 1 1/2" tall, and so does not interfere with the flat lie of the wire flooring.
Run your new incubator for at least 2 days, empty except for water in the bowl, until you are satisfied that the temperature and humidity will remain stable (temperature
99-100F, humidity 50%) without you constantly fiddling with it or having to fuss over it. During this time, you can adjust the thermostat a tiny bit at a time, and adjust the
number of open or partially-open ventilation holes, waiting an hour or two between adjustments to see how the change will affect things.
Be patient. I'm sure you want to put eggs in instantly, but the incubator needs to be set up as a stable environment first. You'll have better chances of a good hatch if you
can take the time to make sure it's holding steady.
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Image Notes
1. Insert the 'outside temperature' probe into the Water Wiggler. Put this into the bottom of your new incubator and monitor the "outside" temperature through the
window. You want the 'outside' temperature to read as close to a stable 99.5F as possible; no lower than 98.5F, and no higher than 100.5F.
In a commercial incubator, eggs are held upright, big end upward, and turned mechanically several times a day. If you want to stand them upright, you can put them in an
egg carton (with the bottoms of the compartments cut off for better air circulation). Cut some 1.5" - 2" blocks of styrofoam from your left over piece, and use these to
alternately prop up the long sides of your cartons. The intent is to put the eggs first at one 45 degree angle and then the other, every 12 hours at least.
Alternately, you can mark the eggs on opposite sides with a pencil, then lay them directly on the wire, turning them at least twice a day (gently flip or roll) so (supposedly)
the chick doesn't stick to the inside of the shell.
Note: when you first put the room-temperature eggs in, the incubator will take several hours to come up to working temperature. This is okay, and normal. The incubator
has to bring the eggs' own thermal masses up to 99-100F. The more eggs you put in, the longer this can take. This incubator will hold at least 2 dozen eggs in cartons. I
think it will hold more if they're just lying on their sides.
On day 18, stop turning the eggs , or remove the tilt-blocks (if using the egg carton method), add more warm water to the bowl in the bottom, use your spray-bottle if
necessary, bring the humidity up to 70%, and do not open the lid. If you want to observe, observe through the window. The chicks need the eggs to hold still, so they can
orient themselves properly to peck themselves free of their shells.
Normal hatching time is 21 days. If your temperature is a little high, they may hatch in 19 or 20 (not desirable). If your temperature is a little low, they may hatch in 22 or
even 23 days (again, not desirable). If your chicks don't hatch on day 21, yet you hear pecking or peeping, be patient and DO NOT HELP. If you feel a desperate need to
help, check the forums at BackYardChickens.com for advice. Human help usually kills hatching chicks.
Do not open the lid until all chicks have hatched. If you MUST open the lid, use your sprayer to bring the relative humidity back up to 70% immediately - even a minute of
dry air can 'shrink wrap' a chick inside the membrane inside its pipped shell.
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Image Notes
1. Here I am checking the accuracy of the leftmost, new, thermometer, against the one in the middle which I know is accurate. (The rightmost one was an Ebay
purchase and I'm sorry I wasted my money on it.)
2. Egg cartons tilted at a 45° angle using styrofoam blocks.
At the time of this writing, I have successfully hatched a single duck egg in this incubator (his name is Sherman and he has gone back to the farm to live). I now have 14
chicken eggs in it, with a hatching date of July 30.
Related Instructables
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Comments
20 comments Add Comment
I will be making a new instructable describing the process of building the bigger-better one (although there are plenty of great instructions over at
BYC. Here is the one I like best: http://www.backyardchickens.com/web/viewblog.php?id=1996-chic-chick-bator but you really need the wiring
diagram on the first link above, if you're anything like me. :D
You're more likely to run into humidity problems in the eggs themselves - too much humidity through the incubation process, and the chicks won't hatch
properly. Or they may drown when they pip internally (break into the air cell, which by hatching should take up at least 1/4 of the volume of the egg). If
the humidity in the incubator is too high, the moisture in the egg won't evaporate adequately, and the air cell won't be large enough. The chick will drown
when it tries to breathe.
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chotii says: Mar 5, 2010. 8:17 PM REPLY
Hi, that's actually a "water wiggler" toy, meant to simulate an egg. The probe goes into the wiggler; the water in the wiggler reaches and sustains the
desired temperature; then you know the content of your eggs will also reach and sustain the desired temprature. You can also purchase "eggs" on Ebay
that will perform the same task. People have done all sorts of creative things, like blow the contents out of a real egg, fill it with dishwashing liquid, seal
the ends with the temperature probe inside, and put that into their incubator....
I found that water wiggler toy at a local specialty toy store, but they can be purchased in many places, such as local WalMarts.
I have successfully hatched eggs using this method of tilting the eggs from side to side.
Good luck!
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