In their first week of life, chicks need a brooder temperature of 95F. Every week thereafter, the temperature is reduced 5F so that by 6 weeks they're at room temperature (70F) and ready for life in an outdoor coop.
Here's the engineering challenge - how do you make an infrared heat lamp secure (so that it does not fall into the brooder and start a fire), yet infinitely adjustable so that it be can be raised and lowered easily to adjust the temperature?
The answer - a locking, ratcheted pulley system.
I secure my racing kayak to my Prius roof rack using the Thule Quick Draw which includes a carabiner, S-hook, and rope ratcheting pulleys.
Now, our heat lamp is secured to an overhead pipe via 8 feet of nylon rope and a ratchet. Just pull on the rope to securely raise the lamp - it cannot fall. To lower, release the ratchet button.
I have a digital thermometer inside the brooder as general guidance, but watch the chicks behavior for a more accurate assessment of their comfort. If they are clustered together for warmth, I lower the lamp two inches. If they are separated and hiding in the corner of the brooder to cool down, I raise the lamp two inches. At this point, they're eating, drinking, and peeping comfortably - a glorious first week of chicken life.
A safe, easy to adjust brooder heat control using a ratcheted pulley system from my Thule rack. That's cool.
If life was only that simple. Enjoy your chicks.
ReplyDeleteI am surprised John that this isn't an arduino based thermocouple controlled system... A stepper motor shield and you'd be all set...
ReplyDelete