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2-3k a year is great too if that’s what you’re paying. Siemens is 10k per year, GE is 7k per team from a local place which is the cheapest I’ve found.
Thanks for info. What price did you get it down to? Still 65k and 5 year warranty covers everything, no service agreement needed for that period? If so, is there service agreement price for after 5y?Scan-C, here’s what I’ve learned:
It’s only been in the US a couple of years. The manufacturer actually produces X-ray tubes for most X-ray and many fluoro companies across the globe and got into the c-arm space because they saw an opportunity to compete in the entry level price range. They state many of the higher priced machines from other companies use their tubes but they legally can’t disclose what machines those are.
Spec wise it is very compatible with the OEC 9800. I saw the machine in actual use in a cadaver lab along side the Phillips, GE, and Zeihm. Image quality was indistinguishable between the 4. None of the cadavers were especially large but shooting lateral through the cervical spine gave a good test on how they all performed. The Scan-C was lightweight and slightly smaller than the others. The arm glide was very smooth, easy to rotate, etc. All the image functions and machine settings are on a digital touchpad. The touchpad was really responsive, no lag, easy to read and laid out well. It comes standard with vascular digital subtraction, laser guide, linear and circular columnation, battery backup, and video output. It stores up to 5 million images on the onboard hard drive. USB output is there for transferring files to the EMR.
I talked with two other doctors who have this machine in their practice. Both were really happy with them and didn’t have any complaints. I will probably get a couple of these. If anyone else is interested in purchasing I think we can get them down on the price a lot the more we buy. Let me know.
Looking to buy a pair of GE One carms. Pretty reasonable single unit, static tube, around 50k . Looks like the original Zhiems. Anybody have experience with these machines? Can you image 350lbs chunksters, resolution? Any info is appreciated…
I'm really marinating on getting a C arm and a procedure room. How do you make a big purchase like this? Monthly payments?Ok, I’ve gotten all the details, have a really competitive price with warranty perks, happy to pass along to anyone looking to purchase. PM me for details.
For us the practice bought it as a capital expense and we allocated the cost as a depreciation expense over 5 years.I'm really marinating on getting a C arm and a procedure room. How do you make a big purchase like this? Monthly payments?
I bought a used 9800 and got a loan from a bank.it was a three year payback. Now own it outright for past three years.I'm really marinating on getting a C arm and a procedure room. How do you make a big purchase like this? Monthly payments?
The problem is I’m technically a W2 employee and I would be the only one using it, so I don’t think I can depreciate it through the practice.We’ve always just bought outright and depreciated over the first year of ownership for taxes.
I’m also on a W2 but for things that only one or two partners use we allocate the depreciation expense to those partners to pay the practice back, since on the books there is, for example, an $80,000 cash outlay balanced by an $80,000 asset acquisition resulting in no net gain or loss of value for the corporation. (At least, I think that’s how it works. I don’t deal with the nitty gritty of the accounting directly).The problem is I’m technically a W2 employee and I would be the only one using it, so I don’t think I can depreciate it through the practice.
GE is just so over priced for private practice. They always brag about their hospital market share. So I end up buying Philips .
Have you checked out Genoray? Korean company, also with 5 year all parts warranty and it’s a flat panel digital detector.
That’s an old and used GE. New are the 9900 which are well over 100k or they have the GE One which is entry level and 70k.
Pmrmd: Any specific brands and models you recommend? Your top 3 if you had to buy one today? Thank you!Get the best equipment you can to help you be the best physician you can. Fluoro is the foundation of our work. It’s the last thing I would get on the cheap.
I’m an OEC guy.Pmrmd: Any specific brands and models you recommend? Your top 3 if you had to buy one today? Thank you!
Amazing, thanks, will look into these!I’m an OEC guy.
1. Elite II
2. Certified 9900
3. Elite CFD if I hit the lottery
Is it super c?I have a 9900 that has been sitting for a while in storage that I'm looking to sell. Very low hours, I mean very low. $60k. It was under service contract before it went into storage in 2017/18 and has been sitting ever since.
YesIs it super c?
Do you ship beyond the wall (north)? haha
Might shop around and get a warranty....Phillips machines are solid as well and typically less than OECsDo you ship beyond the wall (north)? haha
Thanks Nodolor! I'll look into those as well. I have no experience with C arms. Could you recommend a couple specific Phillips models?Might shop around and get a warranty....Phillips machines are solid as well and typically less than OECs
Thanks Nodolor! I'll look into those as well. I have no experience with C arms. Could you recommend a couple specific Phillips models?
Depends on the software. I take a picture of my screen and email to myself, download, and attach the image to the procedure note. Sounds like it’s cumbersome but really takes 5-10 seconds and I’m not dealing with a PACS and all of that.Also, any one able to shed any light on how images are saved in private practice? Do you upload them to the patient's chart in the EMR after the block? Or just keep them in the C arm's storage? Are certain C arms better for this than others?
Staff downloads to zip drive then to pts chart at end of day, pretty easyAlso, any one able to shed any light on how images are saved in private practice? Do you upload them to the patient's chart in the EMR after the block? Or just keep them in the C arm's storage? Are certain C arms better for this than others?
The refurbished should be much less….but supply chain issues and inflation are affecting the prices of everything right now.Guys need some help
OEC One (New) ~$80KUSD
OEC 9900 (Refurbished) ~$100k USD
One year warranty on both
Patient population will mostly be BMI <40
I see. I'm in Canada so that will affect the price as well I think.The refurbished should be much less….but supply chain issues and inflation are affecting the prices of everything right now.
Any updates on your experience with SkanC, especially with regards to price, functionality, reliability, and after-sales service?Crybaby, we are about to pull the trigger on one, maybe two more c arms. I found this one that we can get a great deal on, around 65k brand new and comes with 5 year warranty. They also guarantee 24 hour on-site service in our area. I know they will do a discount if we buy more than one. Our group has bought 4 new Siemens Selects in the past 3 years, all were 55k but only 1 year warranty. Service contract on those are 10k per year, each so we are looking to go another directio
Anyone seen or used one of these SkanC c-arms? 5 year warranty is hard to beat.
I ultimately did not have final say in buying, my new group surprised me with an OEC 9800, I have yet to use as we are awaiting a table 🙂.Any updates on your experience with SkanC, especially with regards to price, functionality, reliability, and after-sales service?