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homemade incubator

purehate

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first is a big thanks to glk herps as it is his design i copied. i went with the herpstat thermestat also from glk herps.

it only took about 1 min for the temps to reach my programmed settings and its stayed at that temp since i programed it on sunday.

once i add 3 or 4 more shelves this should hold around 500 eggs

thanks jeff

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Oh and by the way

Your incubator is awesome !!! I wish I could pay your airfare to memphis and you build me one !!!! I am looking !!! Can you help me !!!!! You know I love ya....B
 
beth
for you anything. it wieghs around 800-100 lbs. i could have taken all the cooling parts out and made it lighter. the hardest part is finding the display cooler. i got lucky and new someone that had it and only wanted $25.

i do see them in the recycler (san fernando valley/Los angeles) for 150-200

you find a way to ship and i will build

jeff
 
Hey Jeff,

Thanks for the props... It looks great, I'm glad everything came together and it is holding temps so well... That is what I really like about the heat coils...

Take care,
George
 
I may have to go with the other fellow...

But Memphis is such a fun city !!!! I am just messing with you Jeff. I like the incubator you let me know about....I just need to get someone on the phone, LOL. You my man could go into business if there was anyway to figure out 100 pound shipping cost. Perhaps NS did just that !!! I am trying to inspire you !!!!i love you buddy and cannot wait to see more of your beardie's offspring......I am in the market for one of your babies....you know that...I thought you were busy !!!!! :rofl: Me too huh??? Take good care Jeff & Beth, B
 
All,

Here is a post that I made on another thread. GLK herp helped me do mine to. Only I live near him. He is an awesome guy and does great work. I currently have eggs in the incubator and I have the humidity at 85% consistently. These eggs are doing much better and the ones in the past. It really isn't that hard to do. PS George this thing is freaking amazing. I have tested it out in the garage in the winter and it still holds temperature!

First, the reason that I started this was because I was getting tired of using the Hovabator. While it worked I thought that it was to unreliable. I thought that I had to monitor the temperatures to much. When eggs were in the incubator in the summer it was almost impossible. Chicago weather goes up and down so fast and so much it just couldn't keep up with the changes.

So I started with a Wine cooler. I wanted something that was going to be larger than needed, reliable, and asthetically pleasing. I found one on craigs list for pretty cheap. I looked at it and it had everything I wanted. It sealed, had a light on a switch from the outside, and a temperature gauge. I only took a picture of the final product so here it is.

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If you look closely at the picture you can see that the racks all are curved in the front. Well, that was the first thing that we did. I had to remove all the curved pieces in the middle. I did not remove the front piece cause I did not want to change the aspect of the rack. I welded in steal tubing to create the racks. First task was simple and only took 20 mins.

George did these steps for me.
Next was to turn this thing from cooling to heating. It was actually as simple as cutting the wires to the compressor to stop the cooling. This allowed the light and thermometor to continue to function. What a bonus.

The next couple pictures are of the heating element and the fan. I did lots of research in this area. At first I was going to get Heat tape. It was the most commonly used element to heat a home made incubator that I could find. But, when I talked to a local guy(GLK HERP) he suggested heat coil. I found that it heated faster, cooled faster, lasted longer, and was cheaper to purchase. The fan was also suggest by him because of the size of this incubator. The fan is run at full speed to move the air up the incubator a little quicker. It is a basic computer cooling fan.

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So the final step in the product was getting the temperature controller. I needed something that was going to control and adjust. I didn't want a simple on off thing like the hovabator uses. The one I selected is a HerpstatND Digital Thermostat purchased from GLK. It has plenty of opitions. Many of which I won't use but the key ones are proportional control and alarm for when I hit specific temps. It lowers the voltage being applied to the heat coil when it reaches the temperature and raises the voltage when it is further away from the temperature. The nice part is that it tells what voltage, as a percentage, it is applying to the coil. I had the temperature set at 85.4. I will incubate at a slightly lower temperature. I tested at this temperature and set the alarm to go off at 86 degrees. The temperature only reached that on the initial warm up and then quickly droped into range.

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The result is a Incubator that controlled the temperature in the basement and the variance over one week was never off by more than .2 degrees. I also noted it hit temperature and adjusted itself in under 2 min. That was amazing.

Ernie
 
Do you guys think the incubator on Nature Spirits Reptiles comparable to yours??? I need some advice...I am not smart enough to build my own but if you get the chance to check this one out let me know what you guys think. I would be forever grateful. Take care Beth
 
midknight
it was when i saw your on here when i contacted glk herp to find out where to get the heat element. i incubate at higher temps then most and this unit has only fluctuated .1 degree
Jeff
 
Well...I am glad hat I could help you out. George is a very level headed person to deal with. I have seen some of his work in person and they all turn out great. I incubate at 85.3 degrees. What are you incubating at?
 
i incubate at 88.0 and dont have any problems. dragons hatch at 4 inches. i heard somewhere that higher temps cause smaller babies. i dont see that. i also went with deeper containers for the eggs. the eggs get so large so fast that they suck all the moisture out of the vermeculite.deeper container more vermeculite and problem solved.
jeff
 
Thanks for the incubator response

I figured...just wanted you to come out & say buy the damn thing !!! LOL.
How do you feel about the adeno issue? Between you & me...its gotten kind of heated...its me & Valley against the world of Fauna Beardies so to speak...I think I was a little hard on my last post...but I so truly feel this way...Forums are crazy !!!! B
 
Hey Ernie,

Haven't seen you around at the show for a while... Hope all is well and I'm glad to hear everything is working so well with the incubator.

Here is the latest one I did...

Take care,
George
 

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George,

Things are going good. I have my first clutch in the incubator. We started redoing the Dragon room and it delayed my breeding a couple of months. I have my test clutch in the incubator now and they should hatch around June 7th. This thing kicks all form of *** when compared to the Hovabator. It is easier to maintain humidity and temperature. Once the eggs hatch I will be hooking my male up with another female. The babies should be massive. He is 620 grams at 23" and still filling out and she is 560 grams at 19".

Ernie
 
I made one out of an old refrigerator. I just used Helix, heat tape, and FEW$4.00 mini fans from walmart. To date I have hatched several cluthches, and more to go!!
 
i was going to use heat tape then i saw the heating element glk herp used on midknight962002 unit and liked how clean it looked compared to heat tape.
jeff
 
purehate said:
i was going to use heat tape then i saw the heating element glk herp used on midknight962002 unit and liked how clean it looked compared to heat tape.
jeff

Jeff,

Could you point me to that heat element?

Thanks, :)

Dan
 
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