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Incubators for Hatching Eggs,Safego 16-30 Chicken Eggs Incubator with Automatic Turner, Temperature Control and LED Candler, Small Poultry Incubator for Hatching Chicken Quail Duck Bird Eggs

  • Based on 5 reviews
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Availability: In Stock.
Fulfilled by Amazon

Arrives Friday, May 10
Order within 10 hours and 31 minutes
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Features

  • Upgrade Automatic Water Adding:Automatic egg turner uses independent external water injection,We can say goodbye to staying up late to add water everyday manually, that will be very convenient and save time.Note:(Bottles not provided,please prepare 1 Coke bottles)
  • Automatic Egg Turner & LED Egg CandlerThe egg hatching incubator can rotate the eggs automatically every 2 hours to ensure the eggs are heated evenly and improve hatching speed, avoid adhesion of eggshells and egg trays, and improve hatchability. Also, this Incubator Build in candling light to observe the development of eggs.
  • Visible Clear ViewVisible transparent lid makes it great for observing the egg development and hatch. The egg hatching incubator comes with adjustable egg tray spacing, the distance between the rollers can be adjusted according to the size of different breeding eggs, and suitable for breeding a variety of eggs, 16 chicken eggs, 9 duck eggs, 24 pigeon eggs, 30 quail eggs,birds Eggs and other egg-like poultry.
  • MORE UNIFORM AIRFLOW: Digital egg incubator adopts turbo fan with circular arrangement of fan blades and distributed wind wing for more uniform temperature.
  • ROBUST AND DURABLE: Mini egg incubator is made of PC material, safe and non toxic, strong and durable, with a panel with temperature display and temperature setting.

Package Dimensions ‏ : ‎ 14.81 x 14.54 x 7.45 inches; 4.21 Pounds


Batteries ‏ : ‎ 2 Unknown batteries required.


Date First Available ‏ : ‎ February 10, 2023


Manufacturer ‏ : ‎ Safego


Best Sellers Rank: #120,809 in Patio, Lawn & Garden (See Top 100 in Patio, Lawn & Garden) #445 in Poultry Habitat Supplies


#445 in Poultry Habitat Supplies:


Customer Reviews: 3.5 3.5 out of 5 stars 5 ratings


Frequently asked questions

If you place your order now, the estimated arrival date for this product is: Friday, May 10

Yes, absolutely! You may return this product for a full refund within 30 days of receiving it.

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Top Amazon Reviews


  • Used parts
I purchased for a new incubator and received old dirty parts
Reviewed in the United States 🇺🇸 on May 25, 2023 by Marisela Rodriguez Marisela Rodriguez

  • It will do
Not the best incubator I've ever used. I don't like that there's no vent to allow air in. Lack of fresh air can end chicks quickly once they hatch. No hydrometer either. 3/10
Reviewed in the United States 🇺🇸 on May 11, 2023 by Amber O.

  • Hatched well
This is a nice little starter incubator and a space saver. It's about the size of a small roaster. I love the candler feature at the top. Make sure to check the eggs quickly because the machine drops quickly in temperature. If you are just learning to hatch this is a good one to work with.
Reviewed in the United States 🇺🇸 on May 13, 2023 by LA

  • Works great
The last incubator broke so I got this to try out. Works great. All the eggs in it appear to be growing and should be hatching next week. Low maintenance, temp is preset. Water is pulled through a tube so it doesn't have to be opened daily to add water like the last one. Overall, better than the last and easier to use. ... show more
Reviewed in the United States 🇺🇸 on May 7, 2023 by Tiffany

  • Good features, awkward design, terrible documentation
This incubator has a few neat design details: - The built in egg-turner will be useful for hatching chickens and anything smaller than chickens. - I like the bold, readable temperature display. - That humidity is maintained by an inverted water bottle with a feed tube is especially convenient when hatching duck eggs (which I do a lot!). - It also has a built-in candler to check egg viability, which I’ve never seen in an incubator before. I found myself using my flashlight anyway, because it’s how I’ve always done it (checking each egg for growth while they’re in the incubator and only pulling out suspicious ones to candle in more detail), but setting eggs down to be held firmly in the candler is probably safer than me holding them to check. Regardless, the candler is very useful for randomly checking eggs when I don’t have a flashlight and is a nifty feature. I think it would be especially useful for educators using this incubator in a classroom setting. There are a few issues though: - At most, I can only hatch 9 duck eggs at a time if I’m using the egg turner. The eggs have to be oriented right for them to roll, and the way they need be to placed reduces the number of eggs you can hatch at once. - The egg turner is awkward. There’s a little bar protruding from the lid. That bar engages in a slot on the plastic rack that divides the eggs (see my photos). The bar rotates, causing the rack to move ever so slowly—unless your eggs are really heavy or too big (like duck eggs!) or the bar is otherwise held up. Then it snags and doesn’t move at all, and I assume if I hadn’t noticed, the motor driving that little bar would burn out. I am removing the turner for this hatch but will definitely use it for my smaller chicken eggs. - The documentation is terrible. It is poorly translated, typo-ridden, and one particular instruction is just wrong (more below). Some examples: “The first time to test egg (day 5th-6th): mainly to check the fertilization of the eggs, select the unfertilized eggs, scattered yellow eggs, dead eggs.” Huh? Little lives are at stake here, so better instructions would be really helpful. In the section labeled “Incubator Assembly&Testing” the first instruction is “PUT EGGS.” ***Wrong!! Do not put eggs in first! As folks who have done this before, I can tell you the first step with an incubator (especially one you haven’t used before) is to get the incubator up to temperature and check that it’s maintaining that temperature steadily before adding eggs. Fluctuating temperatures are terrible if you want a successful hatch, and if it gets too hot you’ll cook the embryos and demolish the entire clutch. *** -Having a separate water bottle seemed brilliant when I read about it in the product description. No more trying to add water to the channels at the bottom of my incubator without overflowing it! But in practice, having it connected to the unit by a 6-inch plastic hose is awkward. Couldn’t this unit have been designed with an integrated water bottle that didn’t interfere with opening the lid? I’m envisioning my cat (or a klutzy human such as myself) either tipping over the bottle or accidentally yanking on the tube and jolting the incubator and the eggs inside. -On a related note, I wish there was a built-in hygrometer to measure humidity levels. Chickens and ducks require different humidity levels throughout incubation and hatching, and it’s a vital variable for my hatches. I need to keep a separate hygrometer in this incubator, and since the incubator is small, it takes up valuable space. -The last issue I found with the Safego Incubator is the lack of air vents, which can impact the hatch rate of the eggs. Proper ventilation is crucial for ensuring that the eggs develop and hatch successfully. While the built-in fan is helpful for air circulation, it would have been beneficial to have air vents for optimal ventilation. And finally, although this isn’t really a problem, I’d prefer a temp gauge that toggled between Celsius and Fahrenheit because I’m American, but since I know how to do the conversion, I should be fine. Bottom line: This little incubator is probably a great choice for school classrooms and hatching small clutches for a few backyard birds. It’s also good to have on hand to rescue a clutch from a first-time broody hen who suddenly decides she’s tired of waiting, after incubating viable eggs for 17 days (yes, I know that’s oddly specific 😂 ). I have duck eggs in this incubator now and will return to update this if I need to. But those little chickens in the photo were rescued eggs from MY impatient first-time mama with 4 days left until hatching. I put 5 viable and nearly ready-to-hatch eggs in my tried-and-true 64-egg incubator and 3 in this Safego incubator. I didn’t need the egg turner, just a warm, humid place. I’m happy to report every one of them hatched 4-5days later, so this incubator performed well for its first 4 day trial run! ... show more
Reviewed in the United States 🇺🇸 on May 4, 2023 by Mrs. Sandhill Crane Mrs. Sandhill Crane

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