Effects of flow-controlled vacuum on milking performance and teat condition in a rotary milking parlor

The objective of this study was to compare a vacuum control system that increases milking system vacuum during the peak flow period of milking to conventional constant vacuum control technology regarding its effect on milk flowrate and milking duration. Further objectives were to study the effects of flow-controlled vacuum on milking parlor performance. An observational study was conducted on a commercial dairy farm milking from 848 to 896 cows per day over the study period using a 60-stall rotary milking parlor. The flow-controlled vacuum control system was applied for 3 wk. Milking performance and teat condition were compared with 3-wk periods prior and subsequent to the test period using conventional vacuum control. Statistical analysis was performed assuming a cross-sectional study design during each period. Flow-controlled vacuum increased peak milk flowrate by 12% and increased average milk flowrate by 4%. The decrease in individual cow milking duration was proportional to milk yield per milking. Postmilking teat condition was good during the entire study period. The occurrence of rough teat ends was slightly reduced during the flow-controlled vacuum period with no meaningful difference in the occurrence of teats with blue color, palpable rings, or petechia. The combination of reduced vacuum during the low flow period of milking and the decrease in milking duration are likely factors that are protective of teat tissues. Bioeconomic modeling of the use of flow-controlled vacuum on the performance of rotary milking parlors, using the data that were collected during the study, showed that the reduction in milking duration of individual cows allows a higher rotary parlor speed. Modeled parlor throughput increased by 5.0% to 419 cows/h, 6.8% to 407 cows/h, and 4.2% to 326 cows/h when 80%, 95%, and 99% of the cows were finished milking at the end of the rotation for a 60-stall parlor. Model results showed that increased parlor throughput resulted in increased labor efficiency, reduced labor costs for milking, and a positive benefit-cost ratio on the investment for all but the smallest herd and parlor sizes considered.

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Main Authors: Reinemann, D.J., van den Borne, B.H.P., Hogeveen, H., Wiedemann, M., Paulrud, C.O.
Format: Article/Letter to editor biblioteca
Language:English
Subjects:labor efficiency, milking machine performance, milking speed, vacuum control,
Online Access:https://research.wur.nl/en/publications/effects-of-flow-controlled-vacuum-on-milking-performance-and-teat
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spelling dig-wur-nl-wurpubs-5820392024-12-04 Reinemann, D.J. van den Borne, B.H.P. Hogeveen, H. Wiedemann, M. Paulrud, C.O. Article/Letter to editor Journal of Dairy Science 104 (2021) 6 ISSN: 0022-0302 Effects of flow-controlled vacuum on milking performance and teat condition in a rotary milking parlor 2021 The objective of this study was to compare a vacuum control system that increases milking system vacuum during the peak flow period of milking to conventional constant vacuum control technology regarding its effect on milk flowrate and milking duration. Further objectives were to study the effects of flow-controlled vacuum on milking parlor performance. An observational study was conducted on a commercial dairy farm milking from 848 to 896 cows per day over the study period using a 60-stall rotary milking parlor. The flow-controlled vacuum control system was applied for 3 wk. Milking performance and teat condition were compared with 3-wk periods prior and subsequent to the test period using conventional vacuum control. Statistical analysis was performed assuming a cross-sectional study design during each period. Flow-controlled vacuum increased peak milk flowrate by 12% and increased average milk flowrate by 4%. The decrease in individual cow milking duration was proportional to milk yield per milking. Postmilking teat condition was good during the entire study period. The occurrence of rough teat ends was slightly reduced during the flow-controlled vacuum period with no meaningful difference in the occurrence of teats with blue color, palpable rings, or petechia. The combination of reduced vacuum during the low flow period of milking and the decrease in milking duration are likely factors that are protective of teat tissues. Bioeconomic modeling of the use of flow-controlled vacuum on the performance of rotary milking parlors, using the data that were collected during the study, showed that the reduction in milking duration of individual cows allows a higher rotary parlor speed. Modeled parlor throughput increased by 5.0% to 419 cows/h, 6.8% to 407 cows/h, and 4.2% to 326 cows/h when 80%, 95%, and 99% of the cows were finished milking at the end of the rotation for a 60-stall parlor. Model results showed that increased parlor throughput resulted in increased labor efficiency, reduced labor costs for milking, and a positive benefit-cost ratio on the investment for all but the smallest herd and parlor sizes considered. en application/pdf https://research.wur.nl/en/publications/effects-of-flow-controlled-vacuum-on-milking-performance-and-teat 10.3168/jds.2020-19418 https://edepot.wur.nl/546243 labor efficiency milking machine performance milking speed vacuum control https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/ https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/ Wageningen University & Research
institution WUR NL
collection DSpace
country Países bajos
countrycode NL
component Bibliográfico
access En linea
databasecode dig-wur-nl
tag biblioteca
region Europa del Oeste
libraryname WUR Library Netherlands
language English
topic labor efficiency
milking machine performance
milking speed
vacuum control
labor efficiency
milking machine performance
milking speed
vacuum control
spellingShingle labor efficiency
milking machine performance
milking speed
vacuum control
labor efficiency
milking machine performance
milking speed
vacuum control
Reinemann, D.J.
van den Borne, B.H.P.
Hogeveen, H.
Wiedemann, M.
Paulrud, C.O.
Effects of flow-controlled vacuum on milking performance and teat condition in a rotary milking parlor
description The objective of this study was to compare a vacuum control system that increases milking system vacuum during the peak flow period of milking to conventional constant vacuum control technology regarding its effect on milk flowrate and milking duration. Further objectives were to study the effects of flow-controlled vacuum on milking parlor performance. An observational study was conducted on a commercial dairy farm milking from 848 to 896 cows per day over the study period using a 60-stall rotary milking parlor. The flow-controlled vacuum control system was applied for 3 wk. Milking performance and teat condition were compared with 3-wk periods prior and subsequent to the test period using conventional vacuum control. Statistical analysis was performed assuming a cross-sectional study design during each period. Flow-controlled vacuum increased peak milk flowrate by 12% and increased average milk flowrate by 4%. The decrease in individual cow milking duration was proportional to milk yield per milking. Postmilking teat condition was good during the entire study period. The occurrence of rough teat ends was slightly reduced during the flow-controlled vacuum period with no meaningful difference in the occurrence of teats with blue color, palpable rings, or petechia. The combination of reduced vacuum during the low flow period of milking and the decrease in milking duration are likely factors that are protective of teat tissues. Bioeconomic modeling of the use of flow-controlled vacuum on the performance of rotary milking parlors, using the data that were collected during the study, showed that the reduction in milking duration of individual cows allows a higher rotary parlor speed. Modeled parlor throughput increased by 5.0% to 419 cows/h, 6.8% to 407 cows/h, and 4.2% to 326 cows/h when 80%, 95%, and 99% of the cows were finished milking at the end of the rotation for a 60-stall parlor. Model results showed that increased parlor throughput resulted in increased labor efficiency, reduced labor costs for milking, and a positive benefit-cost ratio on the investment for all but the smallest herd and parlor sizes considered.
format Article/Letter to editor
topic_facet labor efficiency
milking machine performance
milking speed
vacuum control
author Reinemann, D.J.
van den Borne, B.H.P.
Hogeveen, H.
Wiedemann, M.
Paulrud, C.O.
author_facet Reinemann, D.J.
van den Borne, B.H.P.
Hogeveen, H.
Wiedemann, M.
Paulrud, C.O.
author_sort Reinemann, D.J.
title Effects of flow-controlled vacuum on milking performance and teat condition in a rotary milking parlor
title_short Effects of flow-controlled vacuum on milking performance and teat condition in a rotary milking parlor
title_full Effects of flow-controlled vacuum on milking performance and teat condition in a rotary milking parlor
title_fullStr Effects of flow-controlled vacuum on milking performance and teat condition in a rotary milking parlor
title_full_unstemmed Effects of flow-controlled vacuum on milking performance and teat condition in a rotary milking parlor
title_sort effects of flow-controlled vacuum on milking performance and teat condition in a rotary milking parlor
url https://research.wur.nl/en/publications/effects-of-flow-controlled-vacuum-on-milking-performance-and-teat
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AT wiedemannm effectsofflowcontrolledvacuumonmilkingperformanceandteatconditioninarotarymilkingparlor
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