by
lmh » Wed Jan 20, 2016 9:50 am
Agilent are certainly very good, so you can't go far wrong with them, and there are so many Agilent instruments around that even when they become officially obsolete, it's usually possible to find someone to keep them going for quite a few more years. They are a good choice.
On solid samples: I think that's a bit of a Thermo speciality, isn't it? I don't know who else offers this. They have the special police-truncheon thing that can be used to introduce a source under vacuum, complete with solid sample. The question is: how often do you actually need to do this?
On Shimadzu and your "supporting academic": I would guess you are buying this equipment with public funds. I understand completely how this happens in UK universities, but frankly, it is just unacceptable to discount a reputable manufacturer on the basis of personal likes and dislikes when using public money. I take the view, very strongly, that anyone spending public cash is under an obligation to get quotes and carry out a proper, balanced assessment. Otherwise we get into a situation where (a) the public don't necessarily get good value, and (b) public funds are being used to support one commercial organisation to the prejudice of another, which is fundamentally unfair. If you go over a certain limit within the UK (I can't remember what it is, off-hand, but I'm pretty sure it's way more than a typical GC-MS), you are in any case obliged to go through the EU tender process, and if you go to tender, you can expect to be queried on your decision by unsuccessful suppliers. It's happened to me on the last two purchases I've made. I've noticed, too, that auditors are getting very canny.
The other difficulty with the opinions of individual academics is that they're often misguided: based on one bad experience as a PhD student, using an instrument that is no longer in production, supported by an engineer who's retired, and set up badly in another university by someone who's also long gone. I've gone through phases of heartily loathing Agilent, Waters and Bruker, and deeply mistrusting Thermo and Shimadzu, but have come to realise that every one of them (and of course there are plenty of others too; they're just the companies whose equipment I've used) has a great deal to offer, with a lot of really good instrumentation out there. No more loathing, I actually quite like all of them now!
Sorry about the rant.