Daily maintenance of laying hen cages

2025-03-28


The inside and outside of the egg laying cage must be clean. Ensure that there is no oil stain on the sliding surfaces, screw rods, racks, gearboxes, oil holes, etc. There should be no oil or air leaks from any part. Remove all chips, debris, and dirt around the equipment. Tools, accessories, and workpieces (products) must be placed neatly. Pipes and lines must be orderly. Lubricate well, add or change oil on time, ensure continuous oil supply, no dry friction, normal oil pressure, bright oil level indicator, unobstructed oil passages, oil quality meets requirements, clean oil gun, oil cup, and oil felt. Adhere to safe operating procedures, do not overload the equipment, ensure that the equipment's safety protection devices are complete and reliable, and promptly eliminate unsafe factors.
Daily maintenance of egg laying cages is the foundation of equipment maintenance and must be standardized and formalized. Work quotas and material consumption quotas should be established for regular maintenance of equipment, and assessments should be conducted according to these quotas. Regular equipment maintenance should be included in the workshop's contracted responsibility system assessment. Regular equipment inspection is a planned preventive inspection. In addition to human senses, inspection methods should also include certain inspection tools and instruments, following the regular inspection card. Regular inspections are also known as regular checks. Precision checks should also be performed on mechanical equipment to determine the actual precision level.
Egg laying cage maintenance should follow the maintenance procedures. Equipment maintenance procedures outline the requirements and regulations for daily equipment maintenance. Adhering to equipment maintenance procedures can extend equipment lifespan and ensure a safe and comfortable working environment. The main contents should include:
1. Equipment must meet the operational content, methods, tools and materials used, standards achieved, and precautions for neatness, cleanliness, firmness, lubrication, corrosion prevention, and safety;
2. Locations, methods, and standards for daily inspection and maintenance and regular inspections;
3. Content and methods for inspecting and evaluating the extent to which operators maintain equipment.