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Comparison · Automated egg collection vs Manual egg collection

Automated vs Manual Egg Collection — Labour, Cracks and Payback

Automated collection moves eggs on nest belts to an elevator, then a cross-conveyor and packer; manual collection has staff pick eggs from nests and trolley them to grading. The break-point is flock size, labour cost and the cracked-egg rate your market tolerates.

Automated egg collection

Advantages
  • Removes the largest daily labour line in a layer farm
  • Consistent throughput regardless of staff turnover
  • Integrates directly with in-line grading and packing
  • Better traceability — batch and time-stamped flows
Limitations
  • High CAPEX (belts, elevators, cross-conveyors, packers)
  • Downtime = daily egg backlog — service culture is critical
  • Sizing errors (throughput per hour) cause chronic bottlenecks
Best applications
  • Farms ≥ 30,000 hens per site
  • Regions with rising labour cost or scarcity
  • Producers with in-line grading / packing
  • Export and retail supply requiring traceability

Manual egg collection

Advantages
  • Very low CAPEX — trolleys, trays, hand tools
  • Fast to deploy on small or staged builds
  • Simple to operate — no gearboxes, belts or packers
  • Flexible for mixed flock sizes and layouts
Limitations
  • Labour scales linearly with flock — no economies of scale
  • Higher cracked / dirty egg rate (typically 1–3% additional)
  • Traceability is manual and error-prone
  • Staff availability becomes a production risk
Best applications
  • Small farms (< 10,000 hens)
  • Very low labour-cost markets
  • Staged builds where automation is Phase 2
  • Breeder operations where hand-selection is preferred
CriterionAutomated egg collectionManual egg collection
Indicative CAPEXUSD 80–250k per 50k-hen house (belt + elevator + packer)Minimal — trolleys and trays only
Labour hours per 1,000 hens/day0.05–0.150.6–1.2
Energy per 1,000 eggs collectedLow but continuousNone
Maintenance focusBelt tracking, fingers, elevator chains, packer headsTrolley wheels, tray hygiene
Decision summary

Automated collection pays back within 3–5 years above roughly 30,000 hens per site in mid-to-high labour-cost markets. Below that scale, or where labour is very cheap, manual remains viable. Always size the packer at 1.5× peak lay hourly rate — an undersized packer wipes out the labour saving.

Frequently asked questions

Where do cracks actually come from?

Transitions — nest belt to elevator, elevator to cross-conveyor, cross-conveyor to packer. Correct belt tension, elevator speed and packer-head alignment matter more than the brand of equipment.

Can I phase automation later?

Yes if the house is designed for it — nest lines, belt runs and packer room must be planned on day one. Retrofitting without provision usually means rebuilding the nest system.

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