How's the incubator holding up? I just got mine today so I haven't used it yet. But for the DC cord (and handle) beekeepers will use an incubator for Queen cells and take the incubator out in the field with them to install Queen cells into colonies. The portability makes this incubator very nice for beekeepers (although a little bulky in size).
Been trying to find a male bearded dragon there's the same size as mine very very difficult so far it's nearly impossible so I just turned my incubator into a mini fridge for some reason it started beeping now
I just got one and I am using it to make my tempeh, seems to work pretty well. Was trying to find out though how much electricity it is using if you have it plugged in for so many hours, anyone knows?
WOW just what I wanted to read. I also want to make tempeh in it I am having near-zero success with other methods like the oven, dehydrator, etc And constant monitoring of the temp means no sleep I assume this unit will hold the exact temperature I set it at? Which will be 31c, because it can't decimal points IE 31.5c Can you plz elaborate on your success? I am esp curious as to how it can deal with the tempeh when the beans start generating their own heat. They get much hotter than the ambient/box unit temperature Also is this plug-and-play in that I just prepare my beans as I always do, put beans in like any other incubator, set 31c, and it's all good to go. Bobs my uncle? Any caveats I should be prepared for? Where can I buy extra shelves for this? Shelves or even wire racks.i don't think I can get 2 glad sandwich bags on each shelf? They are almost 6.5 inches each,so I need more shelf space. Also,are the fans an issue that can ruin tempeh? I am told a fan dries tempeh out and ruins it.I am also told I can safely remove the top fan? PS about your electricity At least where I live you can go to a public utilities office and get a device that plugs in between your kit and the wall,and it measures the consumption.I had to get one for my audio gear years back.I would imagine you can buy one.i don't know what they are called. Cheers
@@leperlord7078 hi there, so far my experience is great. Have found out that the starter is crucial, so make sure you get a good one. Also it's important to follow the process for the cooking and "vaccinating" of the beans, e.g. they need to be dry before you add the starter and apple cider vinegar. The rest does the little oven, and little is the word 😅 not much capacity, that's the only negative for me. There is room for a third shelf, but what for? The space would be much to small to make a bag fit. The fan is on top and can be in the way in case you want to stack bags. All in all I make 500g of beans fit and I distribute them ro 4 Tupperware boxes with little holes. Not sure if the fan and water are really needed for the process, I believe so. Still haven't found out how much electricity is needed, but I'm hoping not too much 😊 Usually I leave the beans in there for about 20-24 hours, by then they have built up enough mold. You set the temperature to 32°C and thats it. As soon as temperature cools down, the oven turns on to heat up to the set temperature, thats it. Hope I answered all your questions, if not just let le know. Good luck with your tempeh! It's sure worth it, cause it's so frigging delicious 😊
How's the incubator holding up?
I just got mine today so I haven't used it yet.
But for the DC cord (and handle) beekeepers will use an incubator for Queen cells and take the incubator out in the field with them to install Queen cells into colonies. The portability makes this incubator very nice for beekeepers (although a little bulky in size).
Been trying to find a male bearded dragon there's the same size as mine very very difficult so far it's nearly impossible so I just turned my incubator into a mini fridge for some reason it started beeping now
Hi! Could you tell me please where can I buy parts for that model. I have one which sets down the temperature to minimum (5 degrees)by itself.
I just got one and I am using it to make my tempeh, seems to work pretty well. Was trying to find out though how much electricity it is using if you have it plugged in for so many hours, anyone knows?
WOW just what I wanted to read.
I also want to make tempeh in it
I am having near-zero success with other methods like the oven, dehydrator, etc
And constant monitoring of the temp means no sleep
I assume this unit will hold the exact temperature I set it at?
Which will be 31c, because it can't decimal points IE 31.5c
Can you plz elaborate on your success?
I am esp curious as to how it can deal with the tempeh when the beans start generating their own heat. They get much hotter than the ambient/box unit temperature
Also is this plug-and-play in that I just prepare my beans as I always do, put beans in like any other incubator, set 31c, and it's all good to go. Bobs my uncle?
Any caveats I should be prepared for?
Where can I buy extra shelves for this? Shelves or even wire racks.i don't think I can get 2 glad sandwich bags on each shelf? They are almost 6.5 inches each,so I need more shelf space.
Also,are the fans an issue that can ruin tempeh? I am told a fan dries tempeh out and ruins it.I am also told I can safely remove the top fan?
PS about your electricity
At least where I live you can go to a public utilities office and get a device that plugs in between your kit and the wall,and it measures the consumption.I had to get one for my audio gear years back.I would imagine you can buy one.i don't know what they are called.
Cheers
@@leperlord7078 hi there, so far my experience is great. Have found out that the starter is crucial, so make sure you get a good one. Also it's important to follow the process for the cooking and "vaccinating" of the beans, e.g. they need to be dry before you add the starter and apple cider vinegar. The rest does the little oven, and little is the word 😅 not much capacity, that's the only negative for me. There is room for a third shelf, but what for? The space would be much to small to make a bag fit. The fan is on top and can be in the way in case you want to stack bags. All in all I make 500g of beans fit and I distribute them ro 4 Tupperware boxes with little holes. Not sure if the fan and water are really needed for the process, I believe so. Still haven't found out how much electricity is needed, but I'm hoping not too much 😊 Usually I leave the beans in there for about 20-24 hours, by then they have built up enough mold. You set the temperature to 32°C and thats it. As soon as temperature cools down, the oven turns on to heat up to the set temperature, thats it. Hope I answered all your questions, if not just let le know. Good luck with your tempeh! It's sure worth it, cause it's so frigging delicious 😊
How’s it working for you so far?
Is the temp accurate?
Can it be set from celsius to fahrenheit?
No
Unfortunately not, but this is the best price of incubator I've found and it works well!
Where do you put the water?
The bottom has small chambers like slots that hold a few oz each
Can someone tell me how to increase the humidity up? Mine is constantly in the 30s and I'm using it for cricket eggs
Add water to bottom
I did but my thermometer I have on there still says 47%. Could that just be a defect thermometer
I need to keep my mushroom grow bags at 75 degrees,this looks like it will work...
Yeap would work fine
Can you change
C TO FAHRENHEIT
No
whats a good temp for bearded dragon eggs if u can help me
84 degrees f
@@TheRandomHandyman it don’t go to nothing but celius
@@BratByChoice google is your friend
29 C
@@anthonybeltrame-ly5oq no it isn’t that incubator sucked so does reptabator