HELP: Brinsea Octagon 40 DX
- Ireland-or-bust
- Barbara Good
- Posts: 128
- Joined: Sun Mar 26, 2006 4:09 pm
- Location: Ireland
HELP: Brinsea Octagon 40 DX
Hi all,
I just picked up a Brinsea 40DX and have a question...
It clicks a bit when its moving, is that normal? the manual says
its the motor under strain. I do have 48 large hen eggs in there.
I swapped them for 48 slightly smaller eggs and its still doing it.
It only doe sit when its right over on its side.
Thanks,
Mark.
I just picked up a Brinsea 40DX and have a question...
It clicks a bit when its moving, is that normal? the manual says
its the motor under strain. I do have 48 large hen eggs in there.
I swapped them for 48 slightly smaller eggs and its still doing it.
It only doe sit when its right over on its side.
Thanks,
Mark.
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- Muddypause
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- Stonehead
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Re: HELP: Brinsea Octagon 40 DX
Yes, they do click. We have one and it's enormously reliable, but the clicking is useful audible fail safe. If it stops, there's a problem!Ireland-or-bust wrote:Hi all,
I just picked up a Brinsea 40DX and have a question...
It clicks a bit when its moving, is that normal? the manual says
its the motor under strain. I do have 48 large hen eggs in there.
I swapped them for 48 slightly smaller eggs and its still doing it.
It only doe sit when its right over on its side.
Thanks,
Mark.
- Millymollymandy
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- Ireland-or-bust
- Barbara Good
- Posts: 128
- Joined: Sun Mar 26, 2006 4:09 pm
- Location: Ireland
Is It Safe?.....Is It?
So we're saying its working fine then?
Its just that my hens seem to lay over sized eggs every day.
They won't even fit in to regular large grade egg boxes.
I was worried it was too heavy.
Its been on 24 hours now and still working so looking good.
Its just that if you buy a 48 egg incubator, you expect it to
work with 48 eggs in it. (which i have.)
thanks,
Mark
Its just that my hens seem to lay over sized eggs every day.
They won't even fit in to regular large grade egg boxes.
I was worried it was too heavy.
Its been on 24 hours now and still working so looking good.
Its just that if you buy a 48 egg incubator, you expect it to
work with 48 eggs in it. (which i have.)
thanks,
Mark
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- Ireland-or-bust
- Barbara Good
- Posts: 128
- Joined: Sun Mar 26, 2006 4:09 pm
- Location: Ireland
DX 48
Hi,
Checked that out.
Was just someone on a rant about brinsea. But its from 2005 anyhoo.
Its been running 2 days now and its still clicking at full tilt.
Not stopped yet tho. So may well be able for it.
Next time i'll put less/fewer eggs in i think.
That does however mean that the 48 egg incubator does take 48 tho...
Mark.
Checked that out.
Was just someone on a rant about brinsea. But its from 2005 anyhoo.
Its been running 2 days now and its still clicking at full tilt.
Not stopped yet tho. So may well be able for it.
Next time i'll put less/fewer eggs in i think.
That does however mean that the 48 egg incubator does take 48 tho...
Mark.
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- Stonehead
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We've had ours for three years and many hatchings. No problems unlike the infuriating Italian incubator - the fan has just gone on it, again. The thermometer has failed three times and the turning motor three times.
And when Brinsea say 48 eggs, they mean 48 medium-sized hen eggs. Not the big ones from the likes of hybrid layers and a few of the traditional layer breeds.
I can certainly fit 48 Scots Grey in an Octagon, but if I were to try with the ISA Brown eggs (about 30% bigger) I'd expect to get somewhere in the mid-30s.
If you have a look at the instructions, they give you guidelines for egg numbers based on species (quail, bantam hens, hens, ducks and geese etc). Match the size of your eggs to those and you'll find yourself with a much better idea of how many the Octagon will take.
And when Brinsea say 48 eggs, they mean 48 medium-sized hen eggs. Not the big ones from the likes of hybrid layers and a few of the traditional layer breeds.
I can certainly fit 48 Scots Grey in an Octagon, but if I were to try with the ISA Brown eggs (about 30% bigger) I'd expect to get somewhere in the mid-30s.
If you have a look at the instructions, they give you guidelines for egg numbers based on species (quail, bantam hens, hens, ducks and geese etc). Match the size of your eggs to those and you'll find yourself with a much better idea of how many the Octagon will take.
- Ireland-or-bust
- Barbara Good
- Posts: 128
- Joined: Sun Mar 26, 2006 4:09 pm
- Location: Ireland
Thanks
Hi,
Thanks stonehead, confirmed what i thought.
I may remove a few.
My hens are hybrids and lay massive eggs.
Getting pure breeds here is impossible.
Seem to be only interested in eggs volume.
Thanks
Mark
Thanks stonehead, confirmed what i thought.
I may remove a few.
My hens are hybrids and lay massive eggs.
Getting pure breeds here is impossible.
Seem to be only interested in eggs volume.
Thanks
Mark
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