per
Well-known member
We used ultra sound to preg test this year. Anyone else try this? It was very fast and easy and I see potential for having a split screen to watch the game at the same time.
per said:Twice as fast. No mistakes, you can see the fetus well. Don't need the vet.
Less intrusive and easier on your arm.
hillsdown said:Per what kind of set up do they need , power etc.
lazy ace said:I'm confused how is it easier on the arm....you still have to run the probe in and over the calf to see. speed wise how many can be done in an hour.
not trying to argue just curious.
have a cold one
lazy ace
Q. Does ultrasound help or hinder your time efficiency on a farm call? A. I can acquire more units of information with ultrasound in the same amount of time it would take to palpate a cow. And, of course, I can diagnose some things that cannot be palpated at all -- fetal gender and pregnancies under 30 days.
The probe is a couple inches in diameter and on some he was 5 seconds up to 15 seconds. He double checked with the arm on a few empties. Never seen anyone arm them that fast. You can see the calf plain as day on the screen. After sever thousand head he does a week your arm gets tired. This thing takes no effort to put in. I changed tags to rfid on the ones that had bar codes and I definitely was the bottle neck this year. With a good set up and efficient crew and no old slow tagger I would think you could maintain 30 to 45 second a head. Couldn't tell too many stories at that rate.lazy ace said:I'm confused how is it easier on the arm....you still have to run the probe in and over the calf to see. speed wise how many can be done in an hour.
not trying to argue just curious.
have a cold one
lazy ace
per said:The probe is a couple inches in diameter and on some he was 5 seconds up to 15 seconds. He double checked with the arm on a few empties. Never seen anyone arm them that fast. You can see the calf plain as day on the screen. After sever thousand head he does a week your arm gets tired. This thing takes no effort to put in. I changed tags to rfid on the ones that had bar codes and I definitely was the bottle neck this year. With a good set up and efficient crew and no old slow tagger I would think you could maintain 30 to 45 second a head. Couldn't tell too many stories at that rate.lazy ace said:I'm confused how is it easier on the arm....you still have to run the probe in and over the calf to see. speed wise how many can be done in an hour.
not trying to argue just curious.
have a cold one
lazy ace
hypocritexposer said:lazy ace said:I'm confused how is it easier on the arm....you still have to run the probe in and over the calf to see. speed wise how many can be done in an hour.
not trying to argue just curious.
have a cold one
lazy ace
Q. Does ultrasound help or hinder your time efficiency on a farm call? A. I can acquire more units of information with ultrasound in the same amount of time it would take to palpate a cow. And, of course, I can diagnose some things that cannot be palpated at all -- fetal gender and pregnancies under 30 days.
per said:The probe is a couple inches in diameter and on some he was 5 seconds up to 15 seconds. He double checked with the arm on a few empties. Never seen anyone arm them that fast. You can see the calf plain as day on the screen. After sever thousand head he does a week your arm gets tired. This thing takes no effort to put in. I changed tags to rfid on the ones that had bar codes and I definitely was the bottle neck this year. With a good set up and efficient crew and no old slow tagger I would think you could maintain 30 to 45 second a head. Couldn't tell too many stories at that rate.lazy ace said:I'm confused how is it easier on the arm....you still have to run the probe in and over the calf to see. speed wise how many can be done in an hour.
not trying to argue just curious.
have a cold one
lazy ace