Meat processing plants use slaughter knives with embedded RFID tags

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The processing of meat products requires a variety of slaughter knives, and they need to be replaced frequently to ensure that the blades are sharp. If the staff does not take the knives away when leaving the slaughter room, the knives are reused, which may cause cross-contamination and affect the quality of the meat.

At the entrance of the operation room, the staff put the slaughter tool set close to the RFID reader

To solve the above problems, Friedr. Dick, a German tool company, has developed a tool monitoring solution based on RFID technology. The solution includes passive RFID tags embedded in the tool handles and employee ID cards. RFID readers are installed at the entrances and exits of cleaning and maintenance rooms and other necessary locations. The RFID readers in the solution come from Kathrein and Nordic ID, and the software system is jointly developed by Freidr. Dick and Enso Detego. After the system is installed, the tools in the meat processing room can be effectively tracked, such as who brought the tools into the slaughter room, whether all the tools used by oneself were taken away during the shift, and whether the tools were sharpened before use, etc.

An RFID reader is embedded in the tool distribution table, which can read the information of the tool and the employee card

Freidr. Dick and Enso Detego jointly developed an RFID system. Enso Detego develops a system solution for collecting RFID data. The tool monitoring solution based on RFID technology includes three parts: RFID slaughter knife, RFID reading and writing hardware and data processing software. The hardware, software, and system installation are all handled by Friedr. Dick’s RFID technology department.

The staff puts the RFID tool on the reader

Before entering the operating room, the staff puts the selected tool and the employee card on the RFID reader. At this time, the tool RFID code is associated with the employee’s ID number. Then, enter the operation room through the entrance where the RFID reader is installed, and further confirm whether the tool brought in by the employee is appropriate. If any tool is not allowed to be brought in, the system will issue an alarm.

The staff leave the operating room and also pass through the exit where the RFID reader is installed. If the tool is missing, the system will also issue a warning in the form of live sound or email. Only then can they enter the cleaning and maintenance room to clean and sharpen the tools.

In addition, the user can use a handheld RFID reader to spot check that the tool is in compliance with safety standards at any time.

Master Grip RFID deboning knife, knife length 15 cm

Friedr. Dick’s RFID products are not limited to knives, but also include RFID knife sharpening equipment, special gloves and tool boxes.

Recently, Friedr. Dick has developed a new economical version called Knifeinspector Easy, which includes a small RFID reader from Microelectronics Technology Inc. and related data distribution and processing software. The reader includes a USB port connected to a notebook.

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