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2009 Philips Achieva 1.5T 16 Channel MRI Overview
The 2009 Philips Achieva 1.5T 16 Channel MRI is a versatile imaging platform designed to support a wide range of diagnostic applications across neuro, musculoskeletal, cardiac, breast, and torso studies. Located in Florida, this Philips MRI machine features scalable RF capability, advanced gradient performance, and an extensive SENSE coil package, making it suited for facilities evaluating system replacement or imaging suite expansion. System Specifications Manufacturer: P

Daniele Kuhn
2 days ago3 min read


How to Sell Medical Imaging Equipment in 2026: A Step-by-Step Guide
An MRI or CT upgrade should help your facility move forward, not quietly reduce the value of the system you are replacing. Too often, imaging transitions move quickly. Trade-in discussions happen late. Removal planning is compressed. And the outgoing system becomes an afterthought instead of a recoverable asset. To sell medical imaging equipment effectively in 2026, facilities should begin planning 6 to 12 months before replacement , evaluate independent market demand, docum

Daniele Kuhn
Mar 24 min read


10 Questions Every Facility Should Ask About Medical Equipment Repair
Medical equipment repair is rarely a straightforward decision for healthcare facilities. When imaging systems begin to show signs of failure, leaders must weigh uptime, patient impact, service costs, and long-term viability, often under time pressure and with limited room for error. Medical equipment repair decisions affect far more than a single system fix. They influence operational continuity, clinical confidence, and broader equipment planning. For aging imaging systems,

Daniele Kuhn
Feb 164 min read


How Much Does an MRI Cost? A Buyer’s Guide
How much does an MRI really cost once installation, system removal, service coverage, and downtime are part of the equation? For hospitals and imaging centers, MRI costs are rarely determined solely by the scanner. New systems may require seven-figure investments, while refurbished options often present a lower entry point. In both cases, total cost is shaped by how well the system fits operational demand, transition timelines, and long-term service needs. MRI cost becomes cl

Daniele Kuhn
Feb 54 min read


CT Scanner Price in the US: A Buyer’s Guide
CT scanner pricing rarely becomes a priority until something forces the issue. A system reaches the end of life, patient volume increases, or an installation timeline suddenly accelerates. At that point, decisions around cost, condition, and logistics are often made under pressure, without full visibility into how CT scanner prices actually vary in the US market. The challenge is not finding numbers. It is understanding why prices differ so widely, how used and refurbished sy

Daniele Kuhn
Jan 285 min read


Medical Imaging Equipment: What Healthcare Facilities Should Know
What happens when a critical imaging system fails unexpectedly, or a new scanner arrives before the old one is properly removed? For many healthcare facilities, medical imaging equipment decisions are made under pressure. Aging systems, rising service costs, and tight installation timelines can quickly disrupt workflows and patient care if planning is delayed. Medical imaging equipment refers to diagnostic systems that create images of the body's internal structures for clini

Daniele Kuhn
Jan 144 min read


Types of MRI Machines: Choosing the Right System
Choosing an MRI machine is one of those decisions that looks straightforward on paper and becomes far more complex in practice. Between clinical demands, patient comfort, infrastructure limitations, and long-term costs, the wrong MRI system can quietly strain workflows, budgets, and patient experience for years. The right one supports diagnostic confidence, operational efficiency, and sustainable care delivery. Most healthcare facilities select MRI systems based on a few core

Daniele Kuhn
Jan 95 min read


MRI vs CT Scan: Understanding the Differences That Shape Patient Care
MRI and CT scans are two of the most widely used imaging modalities in modern healthcare. For clinicians and imaging teams who work with these systems daily, these technologies are part of everyday practice. For patients, however, the differences between scans are often unclear and can raise questions or anxiety at the point of care. Understanding how MRI vs CT Scan technology differs in purpose, experience, and use makes it easier for healthcare teams to explain why a specif

Daniele Kuhn
Dec 18, 20256 min read
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