What to look for when buying a delivery system?

Dental delivery systems are designed to play a vital role in reducing or eliminating the number and range of movements that you must perform in the chair. There are two factors that play an important role in reducing your stress and fatigue:

Sports economy
Can see
The following are some of the important issues to consider when purchasing a dental delivery system.

1. Is the delivery system allowed to integrate auxiliary dental equipment?
Find a transmission system that can adapt to a variety of auxiliary equipment (such as two motors, an intra-oral camera, a scaler, and a curing light).
Even if you don't integrate these projects now, how easy is it to add or replace them in the future?

You may have your equipment for 12 to 15 years or more, but assistive technology is rapidly changing. Find a dental delivery system that has enough space to accommodate the accessories in the control head, and an arm with a large enough removable cap to easily run the required wiring or power cord. This will allow you to easily add or replace accessories in the future.

The delivery system that implements the assisted integration will also:

Let you prepare for future needs.
Provide integrated items next to the chair within the arm area.
Eliminates hanging attachments that may prevent positioning of the control head.
Control the aerosol area with an auxiliary power supply to improve infection control.
2. Does the control head have multiple fulcrums?
When accessing the dental handpiece, multiple pivot points provide more angles for precise and convenient control of head positioning.

3. Does the delivery system support solo operators?
The positioning of instruments and dental handpieces is more important for solo practitioners. All dental handpieces, auxiliary equipment and vacuum equipment should be located easily accessible by seated operators to minimize the 4th and 5th level of movement.