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The Micro-Air drill is a professional drill for heavy duty debriding of nail
and callus in busy podiatry clinics. Many hundreds of drills are in daily
use in Canada and the USA. The Ortho-Spray drill sprays a mist of alcohol and water to cool the bur. It has the most slender handpiece. This model with removable bottle is the most popular. The water/alcohol mist totally keeps dust down by binding the dust into a
paste. You do have to clean off the patient's foot at the end of the
treatment. The drill is virtually noise free. Your office will smell
'medical'. You debride more quickly because there is no heat at the bur
tip. The Ortho-Spray drill debrides nail and callus
while cooling bur and patient tissue with a mist of distilled water and
alcohol. The slender handpiece affords a confident grip and superior
control of aggressive burs, allowing you to debride more patients every day.
This drill will earn its keep over and over. Best of all is that
patients prefer this 'painless' treatment and bring referrals to your
clinic.
Please specify if you want the "internal" reservoir or
the "external" reservoir. The external reservoir must be removed for
filling. It can therefore also be cleaned easily. The internal
reservoir (top picture) is slightly smaller but can be replaced with a
larger one as an option. If you use distilled water and a bit of
medical grade alcohol then cleaning is really never needed. Specifications: 110V, 60 Hz.
Water reservoir accessible from the front.
Expected life: 10 to 15
years.
Bur speed: variable/reversible to 30,000 rpm with lots of torque. Drill ships
with footswitch, fill bottle, cleaning tool and stainless steel bur.
Warranty: 3 years parts and labour
Trial period: 2 week money back guarantee
less shipping costs Options:
Finger switch in rear of handpiece. You can also use the
drill without footswitch. Larger internal
reservoir. Carrying bag.
Carrying bag with shoulder strap. We stock all parts
for the drills. Many parts are user replaceable.
Service requirements: Every 3 to 4 years we'd like
to check out the unit, put new grease in the handpiece and lubricate the
compressor. Most users just run the drill until something goes wrong
and then send it. That's OK too.
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