5 Pieces Scissors Forceps HEMOSTATS Needle Holders DDP Instruments
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I love you. Pakistan is the place where they're made. The stainless steel they use is of low grade at best.
Selected User Reviews For 5 Pieces Scissors Forceps HEMOSTATS Needle Holders DDP Instruments
It seems like these tools offer good value and can be used as intended, however, they will not be part of my primary toolkit. It seems that each piece is not aligned or finished properly. On the attached photos you can compare these tools with the competitive kit sold by Matrix here on Amazon for twice as much. (I just forgot to take a picture of the toothed forceps closing. Taking care of this by hand was no problem at all. The arms of the forceps were warped from an attempt to align them at the factory. I suspect that they were bent while aligning them at the factory, so I could not bend them by hand. You will experience a rough cutting sensation when using iris scissors and suture scissors. come with scissors for suturing. )
Although the tools in this kit are functional, I think they are barely adequate. Even at twice the price, I would have been glad to have purchased the Matrix set. Based on the very low price, my rating is relatively high. I still think it is a good value for $16 even though the suture scissors don't come with it. It has even better quality tools than the Edge Instruments kit ASIN B06X9CYLVK. It costs 19 dollars. The set is only $99, but it includes a needle holder, forceps, iris scissors, a #4 scalpel blade holder, bandage scissors, and a decent box.
A & B The scissors are the same as the disposable surgical scissors that we use in our hospital
PROS
You get what you pay for = THESE ARE A STEAL FOR $6USD with Prime Shipping! FLY tying, sewing, art, dissections, and other tasks requiring precise cutting or trimming can be done with ease with these tools. The perfect back-up set to have in your emergency kit for when you run out of blood! There are six U. S. dollars in them. I love the price for what you are getting.
Good tweezers for tasks that don't require fine precision. The tweezers I might be able to use could get me by, but I'd much rather use something of higher quality When it comes to intricate projects, thermostat is a good option. The shipping was free postage. For this price range, I was shocked to find that they deliver prime.
CONS
The hemostats and tweezers are not well-designed or durable enough for everyday There's a pretty rough polish job on the tweezers & the piece of wire There are thermometers. I wasn't able to hold a line with the blunt nose of the hemostats until I got to the 3rd or 4th tooth. During shut up, the teeth of the nose do not match but rather mash. - (The locking teeth on the handle DO line up & However, these lock out wonderfully)
= The flat tweezers are a wash, and the humostats are poor but as a whole, they served their purpose as a back-up set for a true surgical package. I only paid six dollars for the whole set and it was pretty nice It is still astonish me how cheap it is! A Complaints & Appeals Department It seems you've never used any true medical grade tools, done specialized work or fly tied yourself as the market place base price for specialized tools starts at 10 times this price. Please educate yourself on this market place before you respond with such rude terms. Whenever I handle or use this type of metal alloy, there is no way I would ever autoclave it or use high heat or pressure to sterilize it. scissors differ from one another in terms of the metal, but feel and feel alike The hospital looks the same as the clinic. They were hemostats and hemostats and hemostats and hemostats It does not seem possible to handle true sterilization processes with the metal of tweezers. Using the amount of pressure needed to suture up rougher tissues would be too much pressure for them to hold. I also can't imagine the metal used in the hemostats & needles would hold high enough pressure either. A pair of tweezers to last a lifetime.
They are great quality for the price. The polish leaves a little to be desired, but I have a highly polished set that cost almost $30 and were made in Pakistan (where stainless surgical tools are normally made, I've broken many Swiss made tools).
It has a few burrs and is a bit crunchy. There are only two chrome-plated scissors with the notch, and they still feel a bit tacky. Another pair of scissors does a good job for most paper, but not so much for tissue and lightweight materials. You are trying to smooth out flat spots with a stone. The best I can say is that it wasn't as nice as I'd hoped.
Tools like these are great for practicing basic skills. The needle driver appears to be quite small, however. The size of the cutting instrument likely won't be as large as the one you'll use for I am fine with everything else in this case-- The purchase of a larger needle driver might be a good idea.
I bought the item for an emergency kit. You should expect to get the product according to the price you pay. It would be better to take a picture of the actual product instead, or a mirror-finished picture, since the arrived item is actually a raw steel item that oxidizes pretty fast.
The items pictured in this post have been This product does not appear to have a mosquito hemostat, as it is incorrectly described. Forceps, preferably). In either case, both forceps will be adequate as well as functional for thin dressings and thin tissues. A satisfactory finish was achieved with the iris scissors. There are large notches in the cutting edge of the suture scissors, which makes them awful to use. Needles can be held appropriately in the needle holder, but the jaws have an imperfect finish, making it harder to pick up/hold sutures with thin diameters. The price is right on this set which is a great training set.
It would be nice to have the emergency kit at hand, plus my new duo pot has a steam sterilization setting which is pretty cool since we won't have zombies.