Neptune's processing machinery is designed to separate roe from fish at rates of 300 units per minute. Like earlier systems, the newest machine separates the fish into pockets along the processing belt. But much of the work once performed by five human operators has been automated in the new system to speed output, said Richard Green, Neptune's president. To do this properly, the system needs to identify which way each fish is facing so it extracts the mass of eggs without damaging them. "Roe that can sell for $15 a pound drops to $2 a pound if the roe is cut improperly," Green said.
A human operator still ensures that each pocket packs a single fish, but once loaded, the fish move along the belt too rapidly to allow an operator to correct their position. Instead, Sharp's progressive-scan camera monitors the belt and feeds information to computer boards and software from Neptune that trigger an error actuator to correct backward fish. The system is programmed to distinguish a white fish belly from white light reflecting off the wet black back of the fish.
"It's not a pristine situation where you have individual fish taken out of the ocean and laid in the bottom of a tackle box. This is an industrial application; they've been handled mechanically. The program can't be confused by flaws in the fish," Green said.
"The environment is wet, and we didn't want the hassles of trying to package a full computer into this environment, which is why the small size of the Sharp system was convenient," he added.