The accuracy of measuring backfat and loin muscle thicknesses on pork carcasses by the Hennessy HGP2, Destron PG-100, CGM and ultrasound CVT grading probes

2005 ◽  
Vol 85 (4) ◽  
pp. 481-492 ◽  
Author(s):  
C. Pomar ◽  
M. Marcoux

Research was undertaken to evaluate the accuracy of different grading probes measuring backfat (F) and loin muscle thicknesses (M). Thus, 270 pig carcasses were selected according to a 2 × 3 × 3 factorial arrangement. Gender (barrows and gilts), fat thickness at the Canadian grading site (< 15.75, 15.75 to 19.75 and > 19.75 mm), and hot carcass weight (75.5 to 81.8, 81.9 to 86.2 and 86.3 to 92.7 kg) were the main factors. The Hennessy (HGP2), Destron (PG-100) and CGM optic probes and the CVT ultrasound probe with two transducers [PCA-5049, 172 mm (CVT-1) and PCB-5011, 125 mm (CVT-2)] were evaluated. Grading measures were compared to the equivalent measures taken in a digitized image. The F and M precision was evaluated in terms of random bias (ED). Hennessy F and CVT-1 M had the lower ED. For F measurements, CGM, Destron, CVT-2 and CVT-1 ED was respectively, 1.65, 1.72, 1.78 and 2.14 times greater than Hennessy ED. For M measurements, ED of CVT-2, CGM, DPG and Hennessy was 1.02, 1.84, 2.03 and 2.20 times greater than CVT-1 ED. Measures of the intercostal muscles were not reliable in any of the probes able to take that measure. Key words: Pork, carcass grading, grading probes, HGP2, PG-100, CGM, CVT

2016 ◽  
Vol 32 (4) ◽  
pp. 341-352 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jivko Nakev ◽  
Teodora Popova ◽  
Maya Ignatova ◽  
Penka Marinova ◽  
Tania Nikolova

The aim of our study was to assess the dynamics of the characteristics in pig carcasses as affected by the season and year of slaughter. A total of 106 027 carcasses of growing-finishing pigs of commercial production, slaughtered in the same abattoir in 2014 and 2015 were included in the study. The carcasses were classified using UltraFOM 200 device, as the characteristics controlled were back-fat thickness at two locations and the depth of m. Longissimus dorsi. These measurements were used to further determine the lean meat percentage. The results of the study showed significant differences in the dynamics of changes of carcass characteristics during the seasons and the years. The highest lean meat percentage was found in summer (56.48%), followed by spring (56.34%), autumn (56.29%) and winter (56.10%). On the other hand, the pigs slaughtered in winter displayed highest carcass weight and back-fat thickness at both locations.


1991 ◽  
Vol 71 (4) ◽  
pp. 987-991 ◽  
Author(s):  
S. D. M. Jones ◽  
A. K. W. Tong ◽  
S. Talbot

Marbling score was assessed in 20 437 Canadian beef carcasses on a 10-point scale (1 = very abundant, 10 = devoid) in six provinces during the period August to November 1989. Heifer carcasses had a lower marbling score (more marbling fat) than steer carcasses, and both had lower marbling scores (more marbling fat) than bull carcasses. Marbling increased as Canada grade changed from B1 to A1 and from A1 through to A4, indicating that marbling fat increased with carcass fatness. The regression of marbling score on carcass weight and carcass 12th rib fat thickness, although significant, showed that these traits only accounted for 0.5 and 6%, respectively, of the overall variation in marbling score. The overall distribution of marbling scores showed that 20.6% of carcasses had small or more marbling, 57.9% had slight marbling, 20.4% had traces of marbling and 1.1% were devoid of marbling. Key words: Beef, carcass, marbling, survey


1985 ◽  
Vol 65 (3) ◽  
pp. 619-625 ◽  
Author(s):  
W. RAE ◽  
S. D. M. JONES ◽  
B. W. KENNEDY

The magnitude of breed and sex biases in the prediction of meat yield using a single fat measurement was investigated under commercial conditions. Warm carcasses (n = 174) originating from four purebreeds (Yorkshire, 24 boars, 17 gilts; Landrace, 22 boars, 27 gilts; Hampshire, 24 boars, 15 gilts; Duroc, 21 boars, 24 gilts) weighing close to 80 kg were assessed for fat thickness at the maximum loin with a ruler (current Canadian carcass grading measurement) and at the last rib 70 mm from the midline with a Hennessey Grading Probe. All carcasses were evaluated for retail and lean yield 24 h post-slaughter. At the same carcass weight (78.7 kg), significant differences in both retail and lean yield were found (Hampshire > Landrace; boars > gilts), which largely reflected breed and sex differences in fattening. At the same loin fat thickness (25 mm) breed bias in retail yield amounted to 23 g/kg carcass, while sex bias amounted to only 2 g/kg carcass. At the same last rib, fat thickness breed bias in retail yield was reduced to 12 g/kg carcass, while sex bias increased to 4 g/kg carcass. The effect of changing sites of fat measurement from the loin to the last rib in this study resulted in a substantial reduction in breed bias (1.81 kg to 0.98 kg of retail yield), but to increased sex bias (0.15 kg to 0.28 kg of retail yield). Similar trends were found when lean yield was used as the base instead of retail yield. Prediction equations for retail and lean yield were found to be more precise using last rib fat thickness than those using the maximum loin fat measurement. It was concluded that breed bias would be reduced if last rib fat thickness was used to predict the meat content of pork carcasses. Key words: Boar, breed, gilt, pork grading, pork carcass, meat yield


1989 ◽  
Vol 69 (4) ◽  
pp. 897-903
Author(s):  
P. F. ARTHUR ◽  
M. MAKARECHIAN ◽  
M. A. PRICE ◽  
R. T. BERG

Data on 99 young bulls, which were the progeny of matings of either double muscle bulls and normal cows (DMx) or normal bulls and normal cows (N) born over three calving seasons, were analyzed to compare the carcass characteristics and lean yield of yearling DMx and N bulls. DMx carcasses had larger (P < 0.001) ribeye areas and cutability but smaller (P < 0.001) grade fat and average fat thicknesses than N carcasses, when the data were adjusted to either constant slaughter age (395.7 d) or constant carcass weight (304.7 kg). Muscle:fat and muscle:bone ratios and percent muscle in the 10th-11th-12th rib joint were higher (P < 0.001), while percent fat and percent bone in the rib joint were lower (P < 0.005) in DMx compared to N carcasses, when the data were adjusted to either constant grade fat thickness (10.0 mm) or constant rib joint weight (4871.4 g). The magnitude of the observed superiority of DMx over normal carcasses in lean yield was not the same across carcass grades. For A1 or A2 carcasses, rib joints from DMx carcasses had 8.8 and 5.7%, respectively, more (P < 0.05) muscle than those from N carcasses. Key words: Carcass characteristics, double muscle, crosses, cattle


1984 ◽  
Vol 64 (1) ◽  
pp. 29-38 ◽  
Author(s):  
M. L. THONNEY ◽  
A. Y. M. NOUR ◽  
J. R. STOUFFER ◽  
W. R. C. WHITE Jr.

Carcasses from steers which had been fed to one of five within-breed slaughter weights, ranging from 363 to 544 kg for 74 small-framed Angus and from 454 to 612 kg for 71 Holsteins, were separated into wholesale cuts trimmed to 1 cm of outside fat. At the same carcass weight, Holsteins contained more (P < 0.05) of each of the trimmed chuck, rib, loin and round primal cuts. When carcass weight without, rather than with, kidney and KPH (kidney, pelvic and heart) fat was used as the predictor variable, each kilogram increase in carcass weight contained more of each of the trimmed primal cuts and the differences between Holstein and Angus carcasses were larger. Percentage primal cuts declined at a decreasing rate with increasing weight. Chilled carcass weight and fat thickness explained 70.6 and 61.8% of the variation in percentage combined primal cuts and round, respectively. Only from 20 to 27% of the variation in percentage chuck, rib and loin was explained by the best (minimum Sy–x and number of predictors) equations. Key words: Cattle, carcass, primal cuts, weight, mature size


1983 ◽  
Vol 37 (1) ◽  
pp. 33-40 ◽  
Author(s):  
S. D. M. Jones ◽  
C. R. Haworth

ABSTRACTOne hundred and fourteen pig carcasses were measured within 1 h of slaughter for fat thickness at three locations using the SFK Fat-O-Meater. The three fat thickness locations were the last rib and 3rd and 4th last ribs measured 70 mm from the dorsal mid-line over the m. longissimus, and the lumbar fat thickness which was recorded on the anterior face of the m. glutens medius on the dorsal mid-line of the split carcass. Lean depth measurements were also recorded at the last rib and 3rd and 4th last ribs for all carcasses. After overnight chilling the leanness of each carcass was estimated using an EMME SA-1 machine. The carcasses were then separated into the major tissues. The weight of trimmed North American commercial joints (standard of 6 mm subcutaneous fat) and their lean content were best predicted by half carcass weight (residual s.d. = 0·78 and 1·23 kg respectively), whereas the EMME machine readings alone had low precision (residual s.d. = 1·51 and 1·41 kg respectively). The proportion of North American commercial joints in a carcass and their lean content were best predicted by lumbar fat (residual s.d. = 16·5 and 25·8 g/kg). The digital readout of lean content provided by the EMME machine appeared to be more related to carcass weight than lean weight, as residual s.d. for regressions increased when the overall sample was divided into two weight classes. Multiple regression equations indicated that half carcass weight and fat thickness measurements gave the best precision to predict joint and lean weights, whereas fat thickness and lean depth measurements gave the best prediction of carcass joint and lean proportions.


1984 ◽  
Vol 64 (2) ◽  
pp. 323-332 ◽  
Author(s):  
M. A. PRICE ◽  
SARAH BUTSON ◽  
M. MAKARECHIAN

A serial slaughter experiment is described using 48 yearling bulls: 24 Hereford crossbred (HX) and 24 Beef synthetic (SY). Twelve bulls of each breed type were fed a high-energy, mainly grain diet (Hi) and the other 12 a pelleted alfalfa diet (Lo). The two breed types showed similar growth rate and feed efficiency, yet at constant carcass weight (375.2 kg) the HX were fatter (44.2 vs. 37.2 kg) and had less muscle (110.3 vs. 116.8 kg) in the dissected side than the SY. The Hi diet resulted in greater growth rate (1.46 vs. 1.06 kg/day) and feed efficiency (9.5 vs. 12.7 kg/kg), in both breed types, than the Lo diet and resulted in a greater rate of fat thickness accumulation (P = 0.001). At constant carcass weight (375.2 kg), the Hi diet gave more fat (46.9 vs. 34.5 kg) and less msucle (109.0 vs. 118.0 kg) and bone (24.6 vs. 28.0 kg) in the dissected side than the Lo diet in both breed types. It is concluded that biological type and diet can be manipulated independently to produce optimum carcass grades at various carcass weights. Key words: Fatness, feed energy, growth, carcass, bulls, beef production


1991 ◽  
Vol 53 (3) ◽  
pp. 345-352 ◽  
Author(s):  
J. Planella ◽  
G. L. Cook

AbstractCommercial carcass grading measurements and sample joint dissection were evaluated as predictors of carcass lean concentration using a data set of 1320 pig carcasses from four breeding companies. Entire males, castrated males and gilts from White-type and Meat-type populations were reared on ad libitum or restricted feeding regimens and slaughtered to achieve a carcass weight of either 52·5 kg or 72·5 kg. A model was fitted which examined the accuracy and stability of regression equations for different populations, sexes and feeding regimens, and different values of P2 and carcass weight. The regression slope of lean concentration on P2 differed by sex and population. Lean concentration decreased faster with increases in P2 among gilts than among entire or castrated males. At the same level of P2 and carcass weight, pigs fed ad libitum contained 5 g/kg less lean in the carcass than pigs fed at a restricted level. Biases among populations, sexes and feeding regimens were also found when carcass lean concentration was predicted from additional measurements: muscle depth at P2, fat thickness and muscle depth at 3/4 last ribs, and eye-muscle area. The regression slope of lean concentration on sample joints showed little evidence of variation among populations (except for the hand joint), sexes or feeding regimens. There were important differences in the intercept for different populations. The ham was the most accurate (residual s.d. = 11 g/kg) and least biased joint.


2017 ◽  
Vol 52 (2) ◽  
pp. 121-128 ◽  
Author(s):  
Teresinha Marisa Bertol ◽  
Arlei Coldebella ◽  
Jonas Irineu dos Santos Filho ◽  
Antonio Lourenço Guidoni

Abstract: The objective of this work was to develop and evaluate prediction equations, based on measurements obtained on the slaughter line, for carcass classification according to the degree of exudation and the content of marbling. A total of 747 pig carcasses originated from 27 producers were randomly selected on the slaughter line at two slaughterhouses, constituting representative samples from each one. Hot carcass weight, loin depth, back fat thickness, and pH and temperature 45 min after slaughter were used to generate the equations. The carcasses were classified as normal or exudative for drip loss of loin and ham, and as acceptable or undesirable for marbling content. For drip loss of loin and ham, respectively, the overall correct classification of the carcasses was 87.3 and 76.8%, using the discriminant functions, for both categories. For marbling, the overall correct classification was 67.2%, and only 69% of the carcasses were correctly classified as acceptable (marbling >1). The equations developed based on the measurements obtained on the slaughter line allow classifying swine carcasses with high accuracy, according to the degree of exudation, but not with the content of marbling.


1981 ◽  
Vol 33 (3) ◽  
pp. 319-324 ◽  
Author(s):  
A. J. Kempster ◽  
J. P. Chadwick ◽  
D. W. Jones ◽  
A. Cuthbertson

ABSTRACTThe Hennessy and Chong Fat Depth Indicator and the Ulster Probe automatic recording instruments developed for measuring fat thickness were tested against the optical probe for use in pig carcass classification and grading.Fat thickness measurements were taken using each probe 60 mm from the dorsal mid-line over the m. longissimus at the positions of the 3rd/4th lumbar vertebrae, 3rd/4th last ribs and last rib on a total of 110 hot carcasses covering the range of market weights in Great Britain. The standard deviation of carcass lean proportion at equal carcass weight was 35·4 g/kg.The instruments differed little in the precision of carcass lean proportion prediction: residual standard deviation (g/kg) for the multiple regression with carcass weight and the best individual fat measurement for each probe were: last rib optical probe, 22·1; last rib Ulster Probe, 22·7; and 3rd/4th last rib Fat Depth Indicator, 21/6. Residual standard deviation (g/kg) for carcass lean proportion prediction from carcass weight and all three fat measurements in multiple regression were 21·3 optical probe, 21·3 Ulster Probe and 201 Fat Depth Indicator.Similar mean fat measurements were obtained from the optical probe and Fat Depth Indicator, and for these instruments, but to a lesser extent for the Ulster Probe, the regression relationships with each other and with fat thickness measurements taken on the cut surface of the cold carcass were also similar.The differences recorded in precision are unlikely to be sufficiently important to influence the choice of one probe rather than another.


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