Series
Equipment
The equipment series covers what actually determines whether a machine can run your protocols: relative centrifugal force rather than RPM, rotor geometry, imaging and guidance, bench analysis, and sterility. Twentyfour bulletins, written for the person specifying the purchase order.
Bulletins
24 · 1 publishedRMT‑01RCF and RPM, and what the difference costs in yieldIn preparation
RMT‑02AR2T3: specifying a protocol so another clinic can run itIn preparation
RMT‑03Where in the tube the force is measuredIn preparation
RMT‑05One spin or twoIn preparation
RMT‑06Rotor radius, tube geometry, and kit compatibilityIn preparation
RMT‑07Fixed-angle and swing-out rotorsIn preparation
RMT‑08Horizontal centrifugation and what it changedIn preparation
RMT‑09Throughput, footprint, and the room scheduleIn preparation
RMT‑10Ultrasound for injection guidanceIn preparation
RMT‑11Transducer selection: linear, curved, frequencyIn preparation
RMT‑12The ultrasound specifications that actually matterIn preparation
RMT‑13C-arm and fluoroscopyIn preparation
RMT‑14Ultrasound and C-arm comparedIn preparation
RMT‑15Cell counters: automated and manualIn preparation
RMT‑16Hemocytometer countingIn preparation
RMT‑17Microscopes for the clinic benchIn preparation
RMT‑18Pipettes and volumetric accuracyIn preparation
RMT‑19Verifying your platelet concentrationIn preparation
RMT‑20Biosafety cabinets and laminar flow hoodsIn preparation
RMT‑21Cold storage: refrigerators, minus eighty, liquid nitrogenIn preparation
RMT‑22Autoclaves and sterilisationIn preparation
RMT‑23Closed and open systemsIn preparation
RMT‑24The small equipment nobody budgets forIn preparation