Test apparatus

Butchering – Slaughtering – Stunning

Patent

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Details

A22B 306

Patent

active

054336589

DESCRIPTION:

BRIEF SUMMARY
The present invention relates to electrical test equipment for use in conjunction with water baths as currently and as proposedly used for pre-stunning fowl prior to slaughter.
There are various regulations aimed at minimising pain or distress of fowl being slaughtered for human consumption. One method of meeting the regulations involves stunning the fowl, prior to slaughter, by means of electric shocks. Fowl are suspended head down from a moving shackle train electrically connected to a neutral line and their heads brought into immersion with a water bath which is held at an elevated voltage relative to the neutral line. There are various problems with this system. For example, the resistances of individual fowl vary considerably and thus the use of a constant voltage stunning system results in a proportional variation in current passing through the fowl and a corresponding variation in the depth of stunning. The variable resistance caused by random contact of adjacent fowl on the shackle train can also cause variations in electric current through individual fowl.
As a result of these drawbacks in the conventional constant voltage stunning bath a constant current stunning bath has been developed by the applicant and is described in co-pending application GB 9122142.
There is a need for test apparatus, for use with stunning baths of both the constant voltage and constant current types, which can measure the current which will flow through fowl of different resistances.
According to the present invention a test apparatus, for testing stunning baths in which fowl, each having a head, legs and a body having a centre, are to be stunned, includes a casing containing; resistance between. centre of the body; shackle train; and resistances.
The common point in the centre of the body is theoretical and those skilled in the art will realise that its physical location is irrelevant in respect of the electric circuit theory.
The means for completing the electric circuit might, for example, include two conducting T-pieces connected to the casing and a conducting bob suspended from the casing, a suitable material for the T-pieces and the bob being brass.
One embodiment of the present invention will now be described, by way of example only, with reference to the accompanying diagrammatic drawings, of which;
FIG. 1 is a perspective view of apparatus according to the invention,
FIG. 2 is a perspective view of the apparatus with a cover removed,
FIG. 3 is a simplified diagram of the circuit within the apparatus,
FIG. 4 is a more detailed diagram of the circuit within the apparatus,
FIG. 5 is a perspective view of several pieces of apparatus in use, and
FIG. 6 is a circuit diagram of a remote control unit.
A piece of test apparatus includes a casing 10 (FIG. 1) has two brass T-pieces 11 extending from one end thereof and a brass bob 12 extending from the other end. The T-pieces 11 and bob 12 are electrically connected to a circuit (FIG. 3) which includes resistances 13, 14 and 15 (FIG. 2) within the apparatus. The resistances 13, 14, 15 correspond respectively to the resistance between the head and a point in the centre of a fowl's body, the resistance between the legs and the point in the centre of the body, and any single point of contact with an adjacent fowl and the point in the centre of the body, and are in the form of plug-in calibrated networks (see FIG. 2).
Also within the casing 10 are a Hall effect current transducer 17, processing electronics, shown generally at 18 in FIG. 3, for processing the output of the current transformer 17, and a storage unit 19 which might be, for example, a PSION Organiser II.
A suitable circuit for use in the apparatus is shown in FIG. 4.
In use a number of apparatus are suspended by T-pieces 11 to a moving shackle train 20 (FIG. 5) in a manner analagous to fowl. The shackle train is moved, bringing the bobs 12 on the apparatus 10 into contact with a water bath 21. The water bath 21 and shackle train are at different voltages and as a result of immersion of the bobs 12 in water an elec

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patent: 4578841 (1986-04-01), Nijhuis
patent: 4751767 (1988-06-01), Walthier
patent: 4793181 (1988-12-01), Djorup
patent: 4930392 (1990-06-01), Wilson
patent: 5306200 (1994-04-01), Ripol et al.

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