LD5050 - 24-10-2017 at 20:03
Can anybody tell me what this machine exactly does? I found some one giving it away for free because they acquired new equipment. I'm wondering if
it's worth taking off their hands.
LearnedAmateur - 25-10-2017 at 02:40
I gathered that it's some sort of medical diagnosis machine, I believe it could be an analyser for the concentration of certain ions, proteins, and
drugs but the websites I've checked are really obscure when it comes to what it actually does and how it works. Anyway, a machine like that is
definitely worth taking if free - if you can't find uses for it then that could be an easy few thousand for you to make and that's just going off the
size of the thing. Here's a list of the assays it can perform:
https://www.healthcare.siemens.co.uk/integrated-chemistry/sy...
LD5050 - 25-10-2017 at 04:40
Yes so there is actually two machines they are giving away the other one is another name brand I'll have to look it up and post it. I did a quick
search on google and came up with the same info that you did and your right it's pretty vague on what it does, as far as I can tell it's like a drug
testing machine and as well tests for other things. I was assuming they are quite ezxpensive machines and if I didn't have a use for it maybe I could
try to sell it? But I wonder why they don't try to sell it themselves maybe it is obsolete?
Dr.Bob - 25-10-2017 at 05:03
Many of these types of machines require a kit for each analysis, which makes them useless without the pricy kit. Much like the free printer with $50
ink cartridges that print ten pages each. Good luck finding more info.
MountainMan - 25-10-2017 at 07:29
I'm a retired medical Lab director. The RXL is primarily used for small to medium size hospital laboratories to perform clinical chemistry
tests...electrolytes, serum enzymes and other proteins, therapeutic drugs, etc. The reagents are usually supplied as dedicated kits by the vendor as
Dr Bob pointed out. Other factors to consider are its size (as I recall it's about 7-8 feet long and about 3 feet in depth, may require a dedicated
power line, sewer and deionized water hookups.
LD5050 - 25-10-2017 at 09:35
Ok thanks for the info, so In other words it's pretty much useless for me. Are they worth money or are these people giving them away knowing that they
can't really be re sold?
SWIM - 25-10-2017 at 11:11
The way Dr Bob and MountainMan described those machines sounds familiar to me.
If they're what I think they are they have quite a lot of mechanical gizmos in there to do the tests in an automated Rube Goldberg sort of way. (This
is based on equipment I saw in the 80s, and may be outdated information.)
If I'm right they might be desirable as sources of bits and pieces to a dedicated mechanical tinkerer if you know anybody like that.
Not that they'd want to pay much of anything for it, but having a grateful mechanical hobbyist as a friend can really pay off sometimes. It's amazing
the things some of these folks can do, and they're usually the sort who are happy to help out if you need something odd fabricated once in a while.