Here it is from the back, with the back panel removed. You can see the three tilting tray holders. The fan and mechanical stuff is on the top. None of the parts remove easily, so it was tricky to clean and sterilize the fan and wiring in here.
These are some of the switches. The one on the left is the emergency wafer thermostat, set at 102oF that shuts off the heater if the digital thermostat fails. The hole to the right of it is for the humidity gauge, (broken but I have a digital humidity controller and I can stick the sensor in here. I might have to drill this hole a tiny bit larger. The next knob is probably for calibrating the digital thermostat. Then there is an Allen key taped to the panel, not sure for what yet. Then there is a thermometer (I have a Brinsea spot check I'll be putting in there instead, this thermometer can go on the bottom as a back up. Then there is part of a clip that holds the door shut.
Here's the fan and thermostats. It's hard to see but heater coils run in front of the fan, behind the protective screen. You can see the stem of the thermometer at the very top. I think the black box thingie under that is the digital thermostat, then the emergency wafer thermostat, and then I think the heating coil electronics. A water pan goes in front of the fan. There's a hole (yellow plug in it) to run a hose from a water bucket on the side.
This shows the tilting tray holders with the 3 egg trays, and the bottom one that does not tilt is the hatching tray. There are egg holders that go in the trays to keep the eggs upright. Two 30 egg holders fit easily into each tilting tray. A tray tilts in 3 hours. Picture of one of 3 door clips for the heavy plexiglass door.
Back panel on, with 6 adjustable air holes. the fan sucks the air in from these holes. It looks skewed because of the wide angle cell phone lens but the 6 holes and covers are the same size.
The last photo shows the tilting tray switch. I haven't figured this out yet but I hope auto means that the trays tilt on their own, and off is where the switch goes at lockdown if you want the eggs to hatch in the tilting trays. I guess normally you could take out the eggs that are to hatch and put them on the bottom tray, and keep incubating eggs on the tilting trays from another set. I don't plan on doing that, all the eggs will be at the same stage of incubation.
There's also a fuse, and two idiot lights, one I suppose to show the power is on, the other for the tray mechanism., and the power cord. Now we just need to move the incubator upstairs and run it for a week to see how it goes.

One thing I don't like is that there is no off/on switch, when it's plugged in it's running, but that's easily rectified by using a switched surge power bar.