The present invention relates to livestock pens for holding livestock comprising a floor in the form of an intermittently moving endless belt on which the animals stand.
A livestock pen for holding livestock is previously known to the art from SE patent 9604750-1 (508 770). This livestock pen is equipped with an intermittent endless belt in the pen's longitudinal direction. The belt supports all the weight of the animals and serves as the floor of the pen. Here, the floor is ‘replaced’ at regular intervals. Dung is then removed from the belt at its outlet end at the same time as dung-free belt is advanced from the belt's inlet end. As the said document teaches, a belt cleaner can be arranged at the outlet end of the belt and a dredger arranged at the belt's inlet end. Dung is transported from the belt, through a horizontal gap between the end of the belt at the end of the pen, down onto a slippery surface from which compressed air forces the dung into a fertiliser channel. This gap is wide enough to admit the leg of an animal, thereby preventing the animal from injuring itself by stepping beyond the end of the belt when the belt is in motion. However, the design is relatively complex and, accordingly, expensive. Nor is it tailored to animals with thick legs, as such legs could get jammed in the gap.
The purpose of the present invention is to achieve a simplified device for a livestock pen of the aforesaid kind allowing effective removal of dung at the belt's outlet end, is tailored to livestock with both thin legs and thick legs and eliminates the risk of animal parts becoming jammed between the livestock pen's end panel and the belt when the belt is in motion.
The aforesaid purposes, as set forth in the independent claims 1 and 7, are achieved with the present invention, thereby eliminating the said disadvantages. Appropriate embodiments of the invention are set forth in the dependent claims.
The livestock pen according to the invention is equipped with a sensing means arranged at the belt's outlet end and is devised, when actuated, to stop ongoing belt movement. In the depicted embodiment, the sensing means is devised as a pivoting unit that transforms an essentially horizontal force into an angular motion. Other types of sensing means, such as beams or curtains formed from ultrasonic waves or laser beams which are broken when an animal enters a restricted area, are conceivable within the scope of the present invention. Sensing means in the form of weight-sensitive components which sense a vertical load in the vicinity of the belt's outlet end or in the form of capacitors which sense the presence of animals in a restricted area are also conceivable within the scope of the present invention.
In one embodiment, the belt's movement is continuous, but an embodiment with movement consisting of movement cycles is also advantageous. The scope of the invention encompasses wide variations in the design of the endless belt's movement cycles and in the way these cycles are affected when the sensing means causes the movement to stop.
Here, a timer can be arranged to achieve the said cycles. As an advantageous embodiment, computer control can be arranged for monitoring and processing signals from the sensing device and for programmed control of a 24-hour program with cycles of varying length for movement periods, standstill periods and the duration of cumulative standstills in shutdowns.
The invention will now be described in greater detail with reference to embodiments and also with reference to the accompanying drawings, in which
a-e show diagrams of advantageous cycles in a movement stop.
The sensing means is devised to pivot, from a non-actuated position, around a horizontal axis X from a vertical position up to 30° in the direction of belt movement. When the sensing device 20 is subjected to mechanical force, power to a motor M, arranged to drive the capstan 17 and, accordingly, the belt, is shut off. Power shut-off can be performed by a microswitch, but a somewhat more sophisticated solution is shown in the figure. When actuated here, the sensing device 20 sends a signal to a computer D in which the signal is processed and compared to a minimum signal for the corresponding minimum actuation of the sensing means. If minimum actuation is exceeded, a shut-off signal is sent to the motor and stops it, also causing the belt top stop.
The computer D is also arranged to drive the capstan 17 and accordingly regulate the capstan's speed in a feedback regulatory system, as designated by the arrows in the figure. The computer D also controls the belt's 24-hour cycles by means of a program in which DAY or NIGHT is set at e.g. DAY: 06.00-18.00 and NIGHT: 18.00-06.00 with periods of movement lasting e.g. 3 minutes during which the entire floor (belt) rolls out the way, every 50 minutes. The speed and, accordingly, the duration of the period of movement can be set.
Moreover, different stop sequences according to
b shows that when the pivoting unit's actuation ceases, the belt's interrupted period of motion continues from the point at which it was interrupted at the same time as the duration of next period of movement r2 is unaffected. Thus, the shut-down period between r1 and r2 is shortened and corresponds to the duration of the shut-down A.
c shows that when the pivoting unit's actuation ceases, the belt's interrupted period of movement r1 does not continue. The remaining part of the period of movement is transformed into a shut-down period. Thus, no floor is ‘replaced’ until the next period of movement r2.
d shows that when the pivoting unit's actuation ceases, the belt's interrupted period of movement r1 restarts from the beginning, whereupon the next period of movement r2 is chronologically advanced to an extent corresponding to the duration of the shut-down A. Thus the shut-down period between r1 and r2 has the same duration as before, but the entire cycle is advanced. Here, programming can automatically reduce displacement in the next cycle before the cycles get back into phase after 3-4 cycles. An alternative to this would be to prevent any chronological advancement of the next period of movement r2.
Depending on the point at which i1 and i2 occur in a cycle, the computer can be programmed to select one of the described shut-down cycles. If e.g. the entire period of movement occurs during a shut-down, either 3c or 3d can be selected. If only i2 occurs during a shut-down period, one of the alternatives 3b-3d can be selected. If both i1 and i2 occur in the same shut-down period, no cycle is affected whatever. If i1 and i2 occur in two different periods of movement, 3d is selected to achieve complete replacement of the floor.
A shut-down period according to 3e can naturally be added to these selected shut-down cycles.
Optical or acoustic signals may be generated in conjunction with these shut-down cycles in the event of more complex shut-downs.
The shut-down cycles are general for other types of sensing means in embodiments such as curtain of ultrasound or laser beams.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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0004416 | Nov 2000 | SE | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCTSE01/02613 | 11/26/2001 | WO | 00 | 5/22/2003 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
WO0243472 | 6/6/2002 | WO | A |
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1757360 | Apr 1971 | DE |
0728413 | Aug 1996 | EP |
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Number | Date | Country | |
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20040040517 A1 | Mar 2004 | US |