Abstract:
Agricultural mechanization remains a cornerstone of improving productivity, efficiency, and
sustainability in modern farming. The growing population and increasing continuous demand
of chicken meat not only in Uganda but also worldwide has imposed greater call for
advancement in the chicken meat processing industry especially in de-feathering operations.
This paper focuses on the design and fabrication of an automated chicken de-feathering
machine specifically tailored for chicken meat producers. The traditional and motorized
plucking process is labour-intensive, time-consuming, and susceptible to inconsistent quality,
faced with challenges of unregulated scalding temperatures, and manual scalding process. To
address these limitations, this project aimed at automating the water transfer and scalding
mechanism, attaining the optimal scalding temperature and scalding time to reduce human
injuries and poor hygiene while ensuring precision and maintaining the quality of plucked
chicken.
The project adopts an interdisciplinary engineering approach, combining principles of
mechanical design, material selection, torque and speed analysis, and fabrication techniques.
Stainless steel was selected for critical components due to its superior corrosion resistance,
durability, and hygiene—factors essential for food product applications. The machine operates
using a rotary mechanism powered by a motor that drives the rotating plate attached with
pluckers. Detailed calculations were carried out to determine the torque and angular speed
necessary to operate the system efficiently without damaging the chicken.
The design prioritized ergonomics, and cost-effectiveness, ensuring that chicken meat
producers can adopt and operate the machine with ease. SolidWorks was used for modelling,
ensuring design optimization before physical prototyping. The fabricated prototype was tested
under various scalding temperature i.e. 80°C, 85°C, and 90°C at varying rotational motor speed
of 100N for scalding and 240rpm for de-feathering at varying time intervals of 5 and 3 seconds
respectively for both exotic and local breeds. The results demonstrated a significant reduction
in plucking time while attaining optimal scalding temperature of 80°C, and 90°C for exotic and
local chicken respectively at same rotational motor varying speeds and time thereby
maintaining quality, consistency, and machine efficiency. Additionally, safety mechanisms and
ease-of-maintenance considerations were incorporated into the final design.
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This automated chicken feather plucking machine represents a viable solution to the challenges
faced in chicken meat processing industry especially de-feathering operations. It offers a
pathway to enhance productivity, reduce labor dependency, and improve the economic viability
of poultry farming especially in chicken de-feathering operations. The successful completion
of this project provides a foundation for future enhancements, including full automation and
integration with smart agricultural machination technologies.