To Patrik's point: how much is your eyesight worth? Be careful out there. When making plastic covers, use highly resistant materials, like polycarbonate laminates (e.g. MAKROLON). Metal rotors are probably a better idea than plastic ones. IMO, the brand new minifuge is not so expensive and has clearly traceable product liability. DIY in this case might be a great learning tool, if by "losing an eye" you learn what not to do.
This has been your "Important safety tip there, Egan" of the day.
Matt
On Thursday, September 26, 2013, Patrik D'haeseleer wrote:
-- On Thursday, September 26, 2013, Patrik D'haeseleer wrote:
PatrikI would also want to see what happens to that thin acrylic cover when a fully laden tube ejects from the rotor at full speed. High speed centrifuges are explosion-prone devices, and need to be tested as such. Flying shards of acrylic are no fun...The typical recommendation for using the dremelfuge are to hold it inside a metal cooking pot - at least that will give you some serious protection.
On Thu, Sep 26, 2013 at 10:17 AM, Craig Rouskey <craigrouskey@gmail.com> wrote:
Thanks Jenny! Typically for DNA work centrifuge speeds need to be approx. 13000rpm/18000xgOn Thu, Sep 26, 2013 at 1:15 AM, Jenny Ryan <tunabananas@gmail.com> wrote:
Via @BiologiGaragen: New open source centrifuge
http://t.co/otDqV44UER http://t.co/54l7f5DNOt
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