When comparing centrifuge specifications, many buyers look first at RPM. A machine marked 5,000 rpm may seem weaker than one marked 10,000 rpm, and a 20,000 rpm centrifuge may look like the obvious upgrade.
Some laboratory samples cannot separate well with low-speed spinning. A high speed centrifuge gives stronger separation force for microtubes, cells, bacteria, precipitates, proteins, and molecular biology work.
Choosing a centrifuge is rarely about “the fastest machine.” In real labs, the right choice is the one that matches your samples, your workflow, and your separation goal—whether that’s clean layer separation for blood tubes or fast clarification in microtubes.
Choosing the right clinical centrifuge is an essential step in ensuring accurate, reliable, and efficient processing of clinical samples.