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E543 The Economic Reality of Pellet-Free Robotic Milking. A Retrofit Barn Could Lose $71K Trying.
Description
Double Creek Dairy in Merced, California reports $171,000 a year saved going pellet-free on eight DeLaval V300s. Run the same play in a 240-cow free-flow retrofit and the first-year math points to a $44,000 to $71,000 hole.
The Bullvine Podcast breaks down the AMS pellet-free pitch sweeping spring 2026 dealer meetings. Rodenburg's traffic data pegs free-flow fetch rates at 16% of the herd per day versus 8.5% in guided-flow. That gap decides whether pellet-free survives contact with your barn — before a single ration change.
What You'll Learn
- Why Matt Strickland's $171K pencils at Double Creek but may not pencil at yours
- The 10-week transition curve: 9-12% milk drop and what it costs a 240-cow herd
- Free-flow vs. guided-flow: the barn-walk test every operator should run
- Why pellet cost alone ($132-$500/ton per Vita Plus) misses the real decision
- The four red flags that should trigger a 30-day nutritionist-service-lender meeting
- What USDA ERR-356 actually says about AMS payback curves
Most U.S. AMS installations are free-flow retrofits — long alleys, one robot at the end of the pen, no selection gate. Research from Bach (2007 JDS) and Penner (Saskatchewan) shows pellet allocation has little effect on yield in controlled conditions, but pulling the bribe without fixing the concrete stacks transition losses, fetch labor, and early culls into real first-year drag. The Heeg family's guided-flow build in Colby, Wisconsin works. Most retrofits aren't that barn.
Full article and sources: https://www.thebullvine.com/management/robotic-milking/the-economic-reality-of-pellet-free-robotic-milking-a-retrofit-barn-could-lose-71k-trying/ Subscribe for straight-talking dairy analysis. Share this with a producer who needs it.