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Vacuum Plucker Pulls Feathers With Steel Discs
Imagine how easy and clean plucking would be if you could just vacuum the feathers off a chicken or duck. The new British-designed and built “plukaTM" feather plucker does just that, with the help of nine spinning stainless steel discs that grip the feathers and pull with the help of the vacuum’s suction.
  As far as designer Andrew Kennedy knows, it's the only vacuum plucker on the market. Typically, mechanical pluckers use rubber fingers and water with a centrifugal blower.
  “Those machines are messy,” Kennedy says. “Our vacuum feather collector system has a three-stage, 0.5 micron filter. This means it can be operated without any dust or debris escaping onto surfaces or into lungs.”
  The model P71 comes with a wall-mounted cyclonic vacuum with a powerful 1.3 hp motor and clear, flexible tubing to suction the feathers from the plucker. Feathers fall into a bag for easy disposal. The plucker mounts on a powder-coated steel tripod and is powered by its own 1/2-hp motor.
  It plucks all types of domestic and wildfowl, Kennedy says, from chickens and turkeys to snipe, ducks and geese. A video that shows a duck plucked in less than 3 min. can be seen at www.farmshow.com.
  Currently available overseas, Kennedy plans to sell to the U.S. through his website and to set up U.S. distributors in 2012. The P71 sells for $999 (plus shipping). The P7 model, which requires the buyer to furnish the vacuum, costs $799 (plus shipping).
  “Customers like that it’s lightweight and easy to move about,” Kennedy says.
  Contact: FARM SHOW Followup, Dixi Product Design Ltd., Prospect House, 148 Laurence St., York, U.K. Y010 3EB (ph 011 44 113 2161357; www.pluka.co.uk).



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2012 - Volume #36, Issue #2