Mixer-wagon
A mixer-wagon, or diet feeder, is a specialist agricultural machine used for accurately weighing, mixing and distributing total mixed ration (TMR) for ruminant farm animals, in particular cattle and most commonly, dairy cattle.
Trailed mixer-wagons vary in size from 5 m3 to more than 45 m3. Some self-propelled mixer-wagons may be bigger than this. Displacement varies according to ration dry matter. More water means more weight. With dry rations, a 14m3 mixer-wagon such as the one pictured, may contain 3 tonnes fully loaded, or enough for about 60 Holstein cows.
A mixer-wagon commonly consists of:
- a trailed chassis, for coupling to a tractor power unit, and fitted with one or more usually braked axles, and fitted with a road-legal lighting system.
- a mixing body, attached to the chassis by four weighing sensors, one at each corner. There are three main types of mixing body:
- a digital weighing computer working through the above-mentioned weighing sensors. Such a computer can typically memorise 9 or more different rations and 99 or more ingredients.
Loading is generally done using the mixer-wagon cutting and loading device, a high capacity tractor loader, or a telescopic handler.
- the mixing paddle, rotors or augers are connected to the tractor Power Take-Off (PTO) through a reducer system, provided by either a planetary gearbox, and / or a step-down pulley and chain system.
- a set of stationary knives, against which long fibre may be chopped by the forcing action of the mixing rotor.
- a hydraulic door to seal the ration in during mixing, thus permitting the use of liquid feeds such as molasses.
- an unloading system, consisting of a simple hydraulically adjustable chute, up to a hydraulic powered conveyor belt.
- Self-propelled mixer-wagons are mounted on a lorry chassis or may be specialist self-loading machines.