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Joined: Feb 2004
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Super Hero
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Super Hero
Joined: Feb 2004
Posts: 14,798
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Wow! Look at that 3100A (top picture at #77140) ... that's a real classic.

On the subject of defib analyzers:- let's not forget GMC - a brand that is often overlooked.

Meanwhile, the Impulse 3000 reminds me how many of the early biomed test kit items looked very similar. For instance, the simple "T-bar" moulding to separate the paddles (which was a good idea, by the way - and one which was sadly lacking on many newer testers) was used on a few other defib testers (including the old Rigel, if I remember rightly).

Such similarity was (is) especially the case with Multiparameter (ECG) Simulators; Bio-Tek, Dale, DNI, Netech ... then Fluke and now BC Group ... often appeared like they originated from the same OEM (possibly some back-street shed somewhere). This is understandable, as we may imagine that some "manufacturers" may find it easier to buy-in (and re-badge) certain items in order to round-out their range of offerings.

Another example that comes to mind is what was the DNI Infutest 2000 infusion pump tester, which is now marketed in the corporate colours (blue) of Datrend.

NIBP testers and SpO2 testers (especially early ones) were also often either similar, or simply re-badged products from earlier (but sadly demised) OEM's.

I suppose it is inevitable that the Big Boys swallow up the minnow, but it seems to me that products from those small, often innovative, companies usually lose their design flair (for want of a better word) once they get absorbed into a bigger corporate body. Often their original identity is lost altogether. And, as we have already observed, successive versions generally become evermore complex - adding more and more features just because newer technology makes them a possibility (but not always gaining much in the way of practical utility).


If you don't inspect ... don't expect.
Joined: Jun 2018
Posts: 6
Newbie
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Newbie
Joined: Jun 2018
Posts: 6
Re the battery change needing to be done by Fluke approved engineers.

Yes- the case needs to be opened up, so any existing cal is voided. So not only do you need pay them to put a new battery in- you also pay for them to re-calibrate. With a Fluke approved engineer that means your paying over £500.

Joined: May 2023
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Joined: May 2023
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The acquisition of small companies by large companies is not to develop them, but to eliminate them, which is a routine operation of capital. FLUKE's early products in the field of medical metrology were quite blank, mainly relying on DNI NAVADA/METRON/BIO-TEK and others for ODM. Then, relying on FLUKE's sales network to expand the market and gradually occupy the market, ODM manufacturers' market share decreased, and FLUKE naturally acquired these small companies. Then digest their technology for independent research and production, and finally kill the original ODM manufacturer to achieve a monopoly on the market.

1 member likes this: Geoff Hannis
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