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Common Mistakes When Buying A Laboratory Centrifuge

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Buying a laboratory centrifuge for the first time can be challenging because the most visible specifications are not always the most important. A high maximum speed or a large chamber does not automatically mean that the centrifuge is suitable for your samples, tubes, workflow, or laboratory conditions.

Before buying a laboratory centrifuge, compare the required RCF, tube dimensions, rotor configuration, temperature control, capacity per run, voltage, documentation, spare parts, and warranty. For a broader overview of the selection process, see our laboratory centrifuge buying guide.

 

1. Buying by RPM Only

RPM Does Not Show the Complete Centrifugal Force

RPM describes how many times the rotor turns per minute, but it does not directly show the force applied to the sample. The actual centrifugal effect is usually expressed as RCF, or relative centrifugal force, measured in ×g.

Two centrifuges operating at the same RPM can generate different RCF values because their rotor radii are different. A centrifuge with a larger rotor radius may produce a higher RCF at the same rotational speed. For this reason, maximum RPM alone is not enough to determine whether a centrifuge can meet a protocol requirement.

Confirm the Required RCF

If a protocol specifies a target value in ×g, the buyer should confirm whether the centrifuge can reach that value with the selected rotor. The maximum RPM of the centrifuge body may also be different from the permitted maximum speed of a particular rotor.

The RPM vs RCF guide explains how speed, rotor radius, and centrifugal force are related.

Instead of asking only for the highest RPM, provide the supplier with the sample type, target RCF, required capacity, and preferred rotor type. This allows the supplier to verify the actual performance of the complete configuration.

 

2. Not Confirming Tube Size and Rotor

Tube Volume Is Not Enough

A request for a “15 mL centrifuge” or “50 mL centrifuge” is often incomplete. Tubes with the same nominal volume may have different diameters, heights, cap designs, bottom shapes, and maximum RCF ratings.

The supplier should receive both the tube volume and external dimensions. The centrifuge tube size guide provides a reference for common microtubes, conical tubes, blood tubes, and plates.

The Rotor Determines Compatibility

The rotor determines how the container is supported, how many samples can be processed in one run, and what RCF can be reached. A fixed-angle rotor is commonly used for pelleting and higher-speed applications, while a swing-out rotor may be preferred for upright tubes, blood tubes, larger containers, or applications requiring a horizontal separation interface.

The quotation should clearly identify the centrifuge model, rotor model, buckets, adapters, tube capacity, maximum RPM, and maximum RCF. Buyers should not assume that every rotor shown in a product image is included with the machine.

Item to Confirm

Why It Matters

Tube volume and dimensions

Confirms physical fit

Rotor type

Determines application and sediment position

Bucket or adapter

Connects the tube to the rotor correctly

Tubes per run

Determines actual capacity

Maximum RCF

Confirms protocol compatibility

Included accessories

Prevents unexpected additional purchases

 

3. Ignoring Sample Temperature Sensitivity

Some Samples Require Temperature Control

Cells, proteins, biological materials, and temperature-sensitive reagents may require controlled conditions during centrifugation. Short routine runs with stable samples may not need active cooling, but high-speed or long-duration runs can increase chamber and sample temperature.

The buyer should determine whether the protocol requires room-temperature processing, low-temperature processing, or simply protection from excessive warming. This decision should be based on the sample and workflow rather than on the assumption that a refrigerated model is always better.

Refrigeration Adds a Practical Benefit

A refrigerated centrifuge can help maintain a more stable environment for temperature-sensitive samples.

However, refrigeration usually increases the purchase price, equipment weight, power consumption, ventilation requirements, and maintenance workload. The benefit is clear when temperature control protects sample quality or supports a validated process. It may offer little practical value for short, routine runs with temperature-stable samples.

 

4. Underestimating Capacity per Run

Use the Actual Tube Configuration

The stated chamber volume does not show how many laboratory samples can be processed. Capacity depends on the selected rotor, bucket, and adapter.

For example, one rotor may accommodate many 15 mL tubes but fewer 50 mL tubes after larger adapters are installed. Another rotor may support blood tubes or microplates but not conical tubes. Buyers should request capacity information for the exact sample container used in the laboratory.

Calculate Daily Throughput

A simple starting point is:

Peak-period samples ÷ actual capacity per run = minimum required runs

If 120 tubes must be processed during a busy period, a 24-place rotor requires at least five runs, while a 48-place configuration requires at least three.

The complete cycle also includes balancing, loading, acceleration, spin time, deceleration, unloading, and cleaning. A centrifuge that appears large enough on paper may still create delays if each batch requires a long operating cycle.

Avoid Too Little or Too Much Capacity

Insufficient capacity causes sample queues and repeated handling. Excessive capacity increases purchase cost, space requirements, and energy use without improving the actual workflow.

The better approach is to select a centrifuge that covers current peak demand and allows reasonable room for future growth.

 

5. Forgetting Voltage, Plug and Certification

Confirm Electrical and Market Requirements

International buyers should confirm voltage, frequency, plug type, rated power, and destination-country requirements before placing an order. These details affect whether the centrifuge can be connected and operated safely after delivery.

Documentation requirements also vary by country, institution, and application. Buyers should ask for the specific files required by the destination market rather than assuming that one certificate applies everywhere.

Requirement

Information to Confirm

Voltage

110 V, 220 V, or another requirement

Frequency

50 Hz or 60 Hz

Plug type

Destination-country standard

Rated power

Socket and circuit compatibility

Product documents

Manuals, test reports, conformity files

Certificates

Requirements of the importer or institution

Warranty records

Period, coverage, and serial number

When the requirements are unclear, contact GlanLab centrifuge expert before ordering.

 

6. Not Asking About Spare Parts and After-Sales

Ask About Spare Parts Before Shipment

The initial equipment price is not the only cost to consider. International buyers should confirm whether adapters, buckets, tube holders, seals, fuses, power cables, and rotor-related accessories can be supplied with the order.

This does not mean that all parts are likely to fail. The purpose is to identify accessories that may be needed for different tube formats or parts that would be expensive to ship separately later.

Confirm Warranty and Support

A warranty should explain more than the number of months. Buyers need to know when the warranty begins, which components are covered, which parts are treated as consumables, what evidence is required when reporting a fault, and who is responsible for international freight.

After-sales support should also include access to manuals, installation guidance, operating advice, fault assessment, and spare-parts identification.

Support Item

Question to Ask

Warranty period

How long is the equipment covered?

Warranty scope

Which parts and faults are included?

Consumables

Which items are excluded?

Technical support

Is remote diagnosis available?

Spare parts

How long are parts supplied?

Freight responsibility

Who pays shipping for replacement parts?

Manuals

Are English or local-language documents available?

The centrifuge support and FAQ page provides additional information about product use and technical assistance.

 

7. Pre-Order Checklist

Before requesting a quotation, prepare the key information that affects centrifuge selection. You do not need to know every technical detail, but the supplier should understand your sample, container, required force, capacity, temperature conditions, and local electrical requirements.

Essential Information Before Ordering

Category

Details to Provide

Application

Laboratory use, clinical testing, research, cell culture, PRP, blood processing, or another application

Sample and container

Sample type, tube or bottle volume, external dimensions, and container type

Capacity

Samples per run, samples per day, and peak-period workload

Performance

Required RCF or ×g, RPM if specified, and approximate run time

Rotor

Fixed-angle, swing-out, plate rotor, or not sure

Temperature

Refrigerated or non-refrigerated, with required temperature range if applicable

Electrical and delivery

Voltage, frequency, plug type, quantity, and destination country

Documents and support

Certificates, manual language, warranty, spare parts, and service requirements

Copyable Centrifuge Inquiry Template

Subject: Laboratory Centrifuge Recommendation Request

Application:
Sample and container type:
Tube or bottle size:
Samples per run / per day:
Required RCF or RPM:
Preferred rotor type:
Refrigeration required:
Voltage, frequency, and plug type:
Destination country and quantity:
Required certificates, spare parts, or warranty support:
Other requirements:

If some parameters are unknown, provide the available information and ask the supplier to confirm the suitable rotor, adapter, capacity, and centrifuge configuration.

 

Conclusion

The most common mistakes when buying a laboratory centrifuge usually come from comparing one visible specification instead of reviewing the complete application. RPM, RCF, tube dimensions, rotor compatibility, refrigeration, capacity, voltage, certificates, spare parts, and warranty should be evaluated together.

A reliable purchasing process begins with the sample and container, then confirms the required centrifugal force, rotor, capacity, temperature control, electrical configuration, documentation, and support.

GlanLab can review your sample type, tube size, target RPM or RCF, rotor preference, daily throughput, refrigeration, voltage, certification, and spare-parts requirements. Contact us before ordering to confirm a suitable centrifuge configuration.

 

FAQ

Should I choose a centrifuge by RPM or RCF?

Use RCF when possible because it reflects the actual force applied to the sample. RPM alone does not account for rotor radius.

How do I know whether my tubes fit?

Confirm the tube volume, diameter, height, rotor, and adapter. Nominal tube volume alone is not enough.

Do I need a refrigerated centrifuge?

Choose refrigeration for temperature-sensitive samples or long, high-speed runs. Routine short runs may not require it.

What should I confirm about warranty?

Check the warranty period, covered parts, spare-parts availability, technical support, and freight responsibility.

GlanLab, with over 20 years of experience, manufactures a full range of centrifuge machines, including benchtop, high-speed, floor-standing, and specialized models in China. We offer distribution, wholesale, OEM services, and single-unit orders at competitive prices. With complete quality certifications and robust after-sales support, GlanLab is your trusted partner for centrifuge supplies.
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