Eppendorf M1250-9903 Sticky Pad Platform, 18" L x 18" W
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Make sure this fits by entering your model number.Platform to hold a sticky pad (sold separately) for securing laboratory vessels for shaking up to 250rpmFor use with an Eppendorf shakerSolid anodized aluminum with four screw holes for attaching to shaker
상품설명
Size:18" L x 18" W The Eppendorf M1250 Series sticky pad platform holds a sticky pad (sold separately) for securing laboratory vessels for shaking up to 250rpm, is made from solid anodized aluminum, and has four screw holes for attaching to an Eppendorf shaker. The sticky pad is an adhesive mat that is an alternative to flask clamps for securing vessels, such as bottles and dishes that cannot be held with conventional flask clamps, to a shaker platform. The platform is an accessory for use with a variety of Eppendorf shakers. Laboratory shakers agitate liquids during laboratory procedures. These devices can be analog or digital and are typically an automated, electrically powered, countertop unit that shakes liquid in lab containers, such as flasks, funnels, or test tubes. Some shakers can operate inside fume hoods, incubators, refrigerators, or other laboratory devices, and can include controls for the frequency and/or degree of movement. The types of shakers include: orbital, rocking, rolling, rotating, and wrist action. The most common orbital shaker provides a smooth, continuous, circular motion, sometimes with a tilt angle, for uniform mixing of contents. The rocking shaker creates gentle uniform mixing with a see-saw, or up and down, motion. Reciprocating, or rolling, shakers provide a horizontal side-to-side motion with simple agitation of samples. A rotating, or rotisserie, shaker provides samples with a rotating action that moves in a circular motion. Wrist-action shakers duplicate the effect of hand mixing with "arms" on each side of the unit. Some shakers have the ability to incubate or refrigerate samples while providing shaking action.Eppendorf manufactures instruments for cell manipulation and automated devices for liquid handling, for use in life science research laboratories. The company, found in 1945, is headquartered in Hamburg, Germany.
Make sure this fits by entering your model number.Platform to hold a sticky pad (sold separately) for securing laboratory vessels for shaking up to 250rpmFor use with an Eppendorf shakerSolid anodized aluminum with four screw holes for attaching to shaker
상품설명
Size:18" L x 18" W The Eppendorf M1250 Series sticky pad platform holds a sticky pad (sold separately) for securing laboratory vessels for shaking up to 250rpm, is made from solid anodized aluminum, and has four screw holes for attaching to an Eppendorf shaker. The sticky pad is an adhesive mat that is an alternative to flask clamps for securing vessels, such as bottles and dishes that cannot be held with conventional flask clamps, to a shaker platform. The platform is an accessory for use with a variety of Eppendorf shakers. Laboratory shakers agitate liquids during laboratory procedures. These devices can be analog or digital and are typically an automated, electrically powered, countertop unit that shakes liquid in lab containers, such as flasks, funnels, or test tubes. Some shakers can operate inside fume hoods, incubators, refrigerators, or other laboratory devices, and can include controls for the frequency and/or degree of movement. The types of shakers include: orbital, rocking, rolling, rotating, and wrist action. The most common orbital shaker provides a smooth, continuous, circular motion, sometimes with a tilt angle, for uniform mixing of contents. The rocking shaker creates gentle uniform mixing with a see-saw, or up and down, motion. Reciprocating, or rolling, shakers provide a horizontal side-to-side motion with simple agitation of samples. A rotating, or rotisserie, shaker provides samples with a rotating action that moves in a circular motion. Wrist-action shakers duplicate the effect of hand mixing with "arms" on each side of the unit. Some shakers have the ability to incubate or refrigerate samples while providing shaking action.Eppendorf manufactures instruments for cell manipulation and automated devices for liquid handling, for use in life science research laboratories. The company, found in 1945, is headquartered in Hamburg, Germany.
2019-03-21 01:52:23