Product category:
Microplates/microarrays and readers
News Release from: ArrayJet | Subject: Sprint
Edited by the Laboratorytalk Editorial
Team on 17 May 2007
Benchtop inkjet microarray spotter is
the Sprint
More R+D-focussed model has capacity for 20 microarray slides to be loaded and printed from two microtitre plates (96 or 384-well) in walkaway mode; two further plates may be added in relay mode
Arrayjet has announced the release of the Sprint benchtop inkjet microarray spotter, at the Advances in Microarray Technology (AMT) conference in Edinburgh The Sprint employs the same patented technology which made the company's earlier microarray spotters so successful in what was previously believed to be a shrinking market
This article was originally published on Laboratorytalk on 24 Oct 2007 at 8.00am (UK)
Related stories
London nano-prototyping foundry takes Sprint
Arrayjet reorts that the first Sprint microarrayer sold in the UK will be installed at the Bio Nano Centre (BNC), a joint venture of University College London and Imperial College London
Software capabilities offer unrivalled flexibility
Arrayjet has introduced a number of enhancements to its successful Marathon and Sprint microarray platforms, which it says substantially accelerate functionality
The new, smaller, Sprint has been developed with the same attention to detail as the earlier products ensuring dependably consistent and robust microarray spotting.
Additional substrate carriers will also be available for the Sprint to enable printing onto non-glass slide substrates such as silicon-wafers or glass-bottomed plates, making it a more flexible offering than the larger instruments.
Graham Miller, Arrayjet's chief executive commented: "Since commercialising our technology in mid-2005, we have shown ourselves to be a significant player in the microarray spotter market.
Further reading
Inkjet printing produces high quality microarrays
Microarray spotter has a unique replaceable inject print head with over 100 nozzles for excellent uniformity and consistency
Microarray spotter gets high throughput boost
Microplate stacker module enables handling of up to 48 microtitre plates without user intervention, and also automates lid lifting to address sample evaporation during microarray printing
"For example, as protein microarrays move from research into diagnostics, Arrayjet is well-placed to work with the scientists and organisations leading this development.
"We continue to receive a lot of attention and interest in our products, and the quality of protein microarray data produced on our spotter platform speaks for itself".
As a testament to the level of interest this technology has aroused in the market, the first Sprint machine was sold well before the release.
Miller concluded: "The timing and location of the AMT conference couldn't have served us better for the launch of this new instrument.
"AMT has brought all of the world's leading microarray scientists and companies to Edinburgh, and they will all get a chance to see the new Arrayjet Sprint".
AMT has almost doubled in size year on year and has as a result become the foremost microarray conference in Europe; its scope has further increased with two additional conference sessions, 'Lab-on-a-chip world congress' (life science applications) and 'SeqnSyntech' (advances in DNA sequencing and synthesis).
Sales and marketing director Duncan Hall commented: "We enjoyed tremendous success with our spotters at a time when some of our competitors were seeing a drop off in spotter sales.
"The release of the Sprint opens up a whole new market to Arrayjet.
"Customers had asked us for access to our technology in a more compact, R+D-focussed instrument; with the Sprint we have done just that".
The introduction of the Sprint has also led Arrayjet to name its other products appropriately.
The Aj100 will now be known as the Marathon, the Aj120 as the Super-Marathon and the Aj100/Aj120 with additional slide stacker, which will be launched in early 2008, as the Ultra-Marathon.
• ArrayJet: contact details and other news
• Email this article to a colleague
• Register for the free Laboratorytalk email newsletter
• Laboratorytalk Home Page

