So you're looking at negative pressure wound therapy, and you want to know if this partciular unit is teh right fit for your clinic or your specific case load—basically, is it going to handle what you throw at it. The three therapy modes—continuous, intermittent, and —are pretty much standerd now for any serious device, but what you don't always get is the precision we've built into the presure control; it holds that 200 mmHg max with a tight tolerance, and the LCD touch screen lets you dial in exactly what you need without fumbling through menus. We usually see buyers with chronic or surgical wounds gravitate toward this one, but it's also solid for traumatic wounds where you need consistent drainage, though I'd hesitate to recommend it for very small, superficial ulcers where a simpler pump would do.
What a lot of people don't think to ask is about the battery life—you've got up to 12 hours on a full charge, which means you can move the patient around or handle a power outage without losing therapy, and that's a concrete detail form handling these units for years. The canister is 800ml, and it's got an anti-sloshing design which really cuts down on the alarm nuisance from sudden movements; if you've ever had a full canister alarm go off in the middle of the night, you know why that matters. 3. The battery is just one part of it—the alarms themselves are what keep you from guessing: pressure loss, canister full, power failure, all visual and audible, so you're not scrambling to figure out what went wrong. And look, I've seen devices where the alarm sensitivity is too high, causing constant false alerts that staff just ignore, but we've tuned this one so it's reliable without being annoying—roughly 20 days or so of testing before we ship, give or take a day depending on the batch.
Now, can you trust us as the supplier? That's really the second big question, and we've been distributing these for years, so I can tell you the build quality is better than most of the competitive units in this price range—the casing is durable, the connectors hold up, and we keep a good stock of replacement canisters and tubing, we have CE, FDA, and ISO13485 certifications, but I know paperwork doesn't mean everything; what it does mean is we've had to pass audits consistently, and our company provide a COA with every shipment if you need it. The MOQ is usually 5 units, but we can sometimes do a single sample for evaluation (check lead time on that though, as it varies).
Anyway, if you're ordering, just confirm whether you need the standard kit or the one with the instillation function—that's an option some buyers miss, but it's worth asking about if your wounds are heavily infected or have biofilm issues. Lead time is typically 2-4 weeks, but we've had orders ready in 10 days when the factory is quiet. One thing I always mention: the 12 months on the main unit, but the battery and canister are consumables after about 6 months of regular use, so factor that in.
It goes up to 200 mmHg, and you can adjust it freely across Continuous, Intermittent, or Dynamic modes right on the LCD touch screen.
Battery runs up to 12 hours, and yes, you can use it on AC/DC power while charging—no downtime.
Yes, the canister has an anti-sloshing design to keep fluid stable during movement, plus it triggers a 'Canister Full' alarm when it's time to empty.
It's CE, FDA, and ISO13485 certified. We can supply the certificates and any other compliance docs you need for your audit.
MOQ is 10 units for a trial. Standard lead time is 15-20 working days after order confirmation, but we can adjust for urgent requests.