YSI Turb 750 T Benchtop Turbidimeter
Features
- One of the most affordable turbidity meters without compromising quality
- Compact turbidity meter, occupying minimal benchtop space in your lab
- Complies with EPA 180.1 and GLP
- Free ground shipping
- Expedited repair and warranty service
- Lifetime technical support
- More
Overview
The YSI Turb 750 T benchtop turbidity meter provides accurate and precise measurements up to 1100 FNU/NTU at an affordable price. The turbidity meter complies with US EPA 180.1 and includes Analytical Quality Assurance (AQA), which allows for adjustable calibration intervals, calibration record of turbidity standards used and GLP-compliant documentation via PC and LIMS.
Mechanics
With advanced features like intelligent reproducibility and plausibility check (IRPC), the instrument can quickly take multiple measurements and automatically evaluate the data and remove outliers, offering user laboratory efficiency and precision.
- Turb 750 T lab turbidimeter
- (4) 1.5 V AA type batteries
- AC power supply
- USB-A to USB-B mini cable
- (6) 28mm sample vials
- Cap labels for orientation marking
- Cloth
- Quick guide
- Compact operation manual
- Extended manual
- Turb Data PC software
- Inspection protocol
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Connecting with Nature in Real-Time at the Abernathy Field Station
Just five miles away from Washington and Jefferson (W&J) College is the 57-acre Abernathy Field Station . Generously donated by the Abernathy family in 2017, the field station has served as an outdoor lab to hundreds of undergraduate students over the years. Many classes use the Abernathy Field Station every week. For example, in BIO 111, students spend 15 weeks conducting their own research at the field station using a combination of sampling, field observations, and real-time environmental data, giving them a look into the world of science and a closer relationship with nature. “We like to start the students in the research process in their first Biology class.
Riding the Renewable Wave: Testing Wave Energy Converters at Oregon’s PacWave Site
Seven miles off Oregon’s weather-beaten coastline, the world’s biggest wave power testing facility, PacWave, is primed to put the latest renewable energy technology to the test. “There is a huge amount of energy that is not harvested in the ocean,” states the team at Oregon State University involved in the PacWave project. When it comes to harnessing the power of the waves, “It's exciting because it [wave power] is a non-polluting, non-carbon burning technology,” the team says. Wave Power The U.S. Energy Information Administration explains that tidal energy harnesses the flow of seawater in depth under the gravitational forces exerted by the sun and moon–the drivers of tides–while wave energy derives from the kinetic energy of wind-blown surface waves.



