Read the whole article because it’s hilarious.

  • @Brkdncr
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    10011 hours ago

    Holy shit, they pulled the emergency release on one of those MRI machines. I think that adds a zero or two to the cost of bringing back online.

    • @[email protected]
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      10 hours ago

      I’m just an XRay tech. But I would expect at least one whole day, for a pair of engineers to get it running again and re-certified. $20-50K for their time, plus missed revenue from the lost day. Best case could total $100K easy. Way more, if the damage is more than cosmetic.

      • @piecat
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        63 hours ago

        More than a day. Ramping can take multiple days, then it has to be conpletely recalibrated and shimmed.

        Probably need a new magnet, quenching can melt those puppies. Lot of energy stored in that field.

      • @stoly
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        279 hours ago

        You’re not counting the materials costs. I doubt that medical grade helium is cheap.

        • @[email protected]
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          9 hours ago

          True. I don’t know how much that is. But liquid helium shouldn’t be “medical grade” really. It’s just a coolant for the superconducting magnets, same as any industrial use.

          • @[email protected]
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            56 hours ago

            In my experience the only thing that makes a material professional grade is a paper trail. If something goes wrong and you get sued you want to be able to absolutely prove you didn’t cheap out on any of the materials. It adds a lot of cost to keep batches separate and making sure none of the paperwork gets mixed up. Especially if multiple companies are involved in creating and distributing the material. I work in an ISO compliant shop and we have a lot of folders moving around with different orders, it can be a nightmare keeping everything straight when things are busy.

          • @stoly
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            26 hours ago

            I presume that it has to be certified and probably heavily filtered. It’s not going to be the same as what goes into party balloons.

              • @stoly
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                116 minutes ago

                And its a medical setting which means that the products you use will be certified and calibrated in just the right way.

            • @piecat
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              13 hours ago

              There isn’t much difference at all.

    • @FruitfullyYours
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      4610 hours ago

      Yeah, quenching the machine makes bringing it back online $200k+ depending on the system

    • Kalkaline
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      4210 hours ago

      Yeah, that liquid helium and the MRI down time are super expensive

    • @[email protected]
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      3410 hours ago

      even if it was quenched the right way: downtime, helium, restarting the entire thing would also cost pretty penny, and maybe replacement of damaged magnet too if that’s what they did