3*-Lancaster 1972 PSU Develops Truck-Mounted Metering for Farm Bulk Milk A new truck-mounted metering system for farm bulk milk, the first of its knid in the nation to commercially measure milk, was described October 3 at a joint convention of milk and ice cream industry personnel in Atlantic City, N.J. Developed by dairy scientists at The Pennsylvania State University, the new milk metering system has been ap proved by the Pennsylvania Bureau of Standard Weights and Measures, announced Dr. Ed ward D. Glass of the Agricultural Experiment Station at Penn State. He addressed the annual meeting of the Milk Industry Foundation and the International Association of Ice Cream Manufacturers. Industry officials said the system could well-nigh revolutionize the collection of Need . . . HAY - STRAW - EAR CORN Buy Now and Save! More and more farmers are buying from us for better value and all around satisfaction DELIVERED ANY QUANTITY Phone Area Code 717 687-7631 Esbenshade Turkey Farm PARADISE PA. bulk milk. The changeover to such meters may take several years, they indicated, but they said meters will replace the present use of calibrated gage rods immersed in milk. Prior to the National Con ference on Weights and Measures in July of this year, there were no legal specifications and tolerances covering the ap plication of sanitary metering systems to commercial measurement of milk. Now Handbook 44 of the National Bureau of Standards provides the framework within which any state can officially accept or reject vehicle-mounted sanitary metering systems. Dr. Glass said the primary problem in accurately metering milk from farm bulk tanks is to eliminate air. Normally, a volumetric meter will measure passage of air in the same manner as it measures liquid. Mounted on a bulk tank truck, the metering system includes sanitary jnilk pump, air elimination equipment, sanitary meter, and sanitary piping and valves. Development of the prototype equipment at Penn State eliminates nearly 10 years of experiments. The meter has been tested with standard volumes of milk ranging from 100 to 300 gallons. It was found repeatable at plus or minus 0.3 per cent. A working prototype of the milk metering system has been field Keeping Cotton Flame-Resistant Some cotton garments with a fire retardant finish can lose their fire resistance when laundered at home with detergents in areas of moderately hard or hard water. Research indicates, however, that the problem can be easily corrected by rinsing the cottons in a mild acid solution during laundering. This is most easily done by adding about eight ounces of white sugar to the rinse cycle of household washing machines. If preferred, the cottons can be sent to a com mercial laundry where a mild acid rinse is part of the standard laundering procedure. BROWN! & REA ATTENTION: DAIRY FARMERS Since installing a New Grain Crimper we are able to supply you with improved more palatable coarse textured feed for your Dairy Herd and Horse feed needs. We will be able to crimp your home grown grains so that you can mcorperate them into your feed mixture. For Complete Information Call or Visit our feed store at your convenience BROWN & REA INC. ATGLEN, PA. tested for 15 months following examination by the National Bureau of Standards, Dr. Glass stated. The system is being used as a basis for commercial payment to farmers selling milk to the University Creamery. Research currently underway is comparing accuracy of the Penn State prototype metering system with a series of calibrated farm bulk tanks. Several licensed milk weighers and samplers independently deter mine the gage rod volume of milk in specific tanks. For com parison, the volume is then measured by the new metering system. Interest in an improved method of measuring milk atthefarm has existed for years among farmers and milk buyers, as well as weights and measures officials. Like industry representatives, Dr. Glass says that gage rods for measuring milk will not become P. L ROHRER Pt CBO., INC. i I I SMOKETOWN, PA. obsolete for some time. Manufacturers with a approved prototype system will first need to make the transition from prototype to mass production. In * addition, weights and measures agencies will have to become familiar with a new series of test procedures , Dr. Glass observed, and must pur chase the necessaiy sanitary proving equipment. Moreover, the dimensions of the prototype system, about 3 feet by 3 feet by foot, will require some modifications in most existing tank pickup trucks. Dr. Glass and associates also plan to examine the potential for stationary large capacity, sanitary milk metering systems with flow rates ranging from 150 to 250 gallons per minute. These will be evaluated as an alter native to the vehicle scale for measuring over-the-road tank truck shipments of milk. I I I % Phone Lane. 397-3539 Red Rose ANIMAL FEEDS PHONE; (215) 593-5149 l I I I