• Feeding Savings more dollars over feed cost • Improve Herd Health • Simple installation Efficient feeding = Higher PROFITS Group feeding is costly and inefficient. To maximize your profits, you’ve got to supply each cow with the exact amount of feed she needs to maintain her milk production level. The computerized Sei ecutive 8085 System lets you do just tha most dairymen find the system pays for itself in reduced f feed bills and increased production in less than a year! it's simple You determine a daily feeding allowance for each cow by programming the computer to dispense a certain amount of feed during each 6,8 or 12 hour cycle. You choose a unique ration for each animal by mixing sup plement and base rations with the computer. • Each cow wears an inexpensive, reliable identification tag. • Cows can feed at any feeding station. • Feeding auger automatically stops when cow steps away. • Each cow receives only the amount of feed you have programmed for it. Money-saving management tool You can get a printout from the Executive 8085 at any time. Each print out gives you the valuable feed management information: • Amount of feed programmed for each cow • Amount of feed dispensed to each cow, this cycle • Amount of feed dispensed to each cow, this month • Summary of previous cycle. You can quickly spot problem cows by asking the computer to print out all cows not eating 75% of their pro grammed ration. Total herd management system For a total dairy management system, connect your Selective Feeder System with our Zenith Farm Management System. Readouts are available in your office on the Zenith computer. Optional software programs allow you to integrate health, breeding, production and feeding management programs in one computer system. For more information write for free product literature. SOLD & SERVICED BY: MARTIN EQUIPMENT CO. ® .Selective c<> Fee de r P.O. Box 219 Chambersburg, PA 17201-0219 717-263-3505 ASK FOR DON MARTIN • Program Each Cow to receive the amounts of feed as compared to production • Easy To Operate t* A Look for the “REAL 5 Seal on Milk -« r Oairj? Business Newton Bair Now, About Those Computers: Lately there has been an almost constant stream of articles, in formation and propaganda about the use of computers in agriculture. They almost make one feel quilty if you are not one of the ‘early adopters’ of the computer as a farm tool. Well, I have no in tention of making anyone feel guilty of inferior. But to keep the record up to date, let’s look at what is happening. Just like the telephone of eighty years ago, or the Fordson tractor sixty or more years back, most farmers want to wait until there is plenty of evidence that they really need one. Or that this new tool will do something better, faster, or more thoroughly than the old way. The computer won’t ever replace good judgement or even good common sense. But we have to look at some of the things it can do that would be very difficult or nearly impossible any other way. And since there are plenty of dairymen and other farmers who have already begtm to use them, we can * get a good idea of how and why they are using computers. First, we soidd distinguish between the home or small business type, which is properly called a ‘mini computer’, and the type that is used for special ap plications like cattle feeders, special controls and automatic recording devices. Applications hardware is usually designed for a single purpose only, like the automatic cattle feeders that ration and record the feed eaten by each cow. On the other hand, minicomputers such as the Apple 11, Radio Shack, Comodore etc., are much more versatile and in telligent. They quickly become indispensible for record keeping, * USED TANKS AVAILABLE MARTIN’S REFRIGERATION SERVICE 1122 Woodstock Rd.. Fayetteville, Pa. 17222 Phone (717) 352-2783 Sales & Service Lancaster Farming, Saturday, May 21,1983—D19 decision making and a multitude of , other uses, limited only by the users initiative and imagination. Application Hardware - So far, more farmers have latched on to the idea that a computer should automate some part of the business. Cattle feeding systems are becoming very popular for this reason. I know of at least a dozen already on line in Lebanon County, and I’m sure there are many in the surrounding area. The cost of this type of equipment is fairly high, running from $lO,OOO to $25,000 per farm. The economics of an expenditure like this must be very carefully analyzed, not only from the dollars and cents angle, but also from the effect on time, herd health, family involvement and overall management. When we examine the reasons for installing a computerized feeding system, some are valid and some are not. Large herds are harder to group and often place individual cows under a lot of stress when moved between groups. Individual attention is pretty difficult to manage. A computerized feeding system might possibly be the answer to this if there are limitations on the herd management. The limits might be the time, energy or management ability of the owner or herdsman. In this case, automation is substituted for human judgement. However, the computer will only perform or pay off in proportion to the good judgement of the herdsman. I heard of one fellow who had the system removed because it didn’t save time, and the dealer couldn’t ‘work out the bugs’. A computerized feed system sets (Turn to PageD2o)