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Homogenizers

Lose less time to equipment sharing. Stop losing samples to breakdowns. And don’t pay for vanity features that eat your budget.

 Keep protocols running during equipment maintenance

 Eliminate scheduling conflicts between users

Get consistent results without premium pricing 

 Process incompatible sample types without cross-contamination

Whether you're extracting RNA from hundreds of tissue samples, preparing proteins for Western blots, or lysing cells for DNA isolation, this curated collection of rotor-stator tissue homogenizers delivers the mechanical disruption your protocols need. No complexity that inflates costs. No corners cut to save budget. Discover why labs choose our straightforward tissue homogenizer approach to sample preparation.

Models suitable for…

 RNA/DNA extraction

 Protein preparation

Cell lysis and disruption

Tissue dissociation


Scilogex SCI-1524R refrigerated microcentrifuge at a glance

   What is this product line?

This is a line of benchtop laboratory centrifuges. The collection includes mini centrifuges, high-speed microcentrifuges, refrigerated microcentrifuges, low-speed clinical centrifuges, hematocrit centrifuges, and multipurpose centrifuges. Speeds range from 2,000 RPM to 15,000 RPM with capacities from single PCR strips to 100mL tubes. Prices range from $240 to $5,400.

   Who is it for?

Principal investigators, lab managers, and procurement teams in molecular biology, biochemistry, clinical diagnostics, and cell biology who need reliable centrifugation without premium brand pricing. Also suitable for new lab builds where equipment budgets need to stretch across multiple benchtop instruments.

   What do they do?

Separate samples by density using centrifugal force. Applications include pelleting cells and bacteria, isolating DNA/RNA/proteins, processing clinical samples, preparing serum and plasma, running hematocrit tests, and quick spins to collect liquid at the bottom of tubes.

   What are the benefits in your workplace?

Reliable separation at 40-60% lower cost than premium brands. Brushless motors require no maintenance. 2-year warranties provide budget predictability. The money you save on centrifuges stays available for reagents, antibodies, and consumables that actually determine your results.

   What problems does it solve?

Overpaying for centrifuge features you don't use. Justifying equipment purchases when procurement asks why you didn't choose the cheaper option. Budget pressure that forces you to choose between good equipment and adequate reagent supply. Waiting for service calls on complicated equipment when you just need to spin samples.

   What are your next steps?

Browse the categories above to find the right centrifuge type for your application, or contact us for volume pricing if you're equipping a new lab.

Whether you're pelleting cells, isolating nucleic acids, separating serum, or running quick spins before PCR, your laboratory centrifuge needs to deliver consistent speed and reliable operation. Scilogex benchtop centrifuges do exactly that - without the premium pricing that forces you to justify every equipment purchase to your department chair or procurement office.


Models suitable for…

Molecular biology labs
Clinical diagnostics
Cell culture facilities

Hematology and blood banking



 Why Scilogex laboratory centrifuges make sense for most labs

 The pragmatic choice for labs that care about results

 Your DNA pellet doesn't know whether it was spun in a $1,500 centrifuge or a $6,000 centrifuge. Your serum separates the same way regardless of brand. The difference shows up in your budget, not in your results.

Why choose Scilogex benchtop centrifuges for your lab?

  • The physics is the same. ​15,000 RPM produces the same g-force whether you're using a Scilogex or a premium brand. Your samples don't care about brand names - they care about consistent speed and proper temperature control.
  • Brushless motors are standard, not premium.  All our high-speed centrifuges use brushless DC motors that run quietly for years without service calls or brush replacements.
  • The money you save actually matters. The difference between a Scilogex microcentrifuge and premium alternatives often covers several months of reagent supply. That's budget that funds actual science.
  • 2-year warranties mean predictable costs. You know what you're paying upfront, and you're not budgeting for annual service contracts on top of the purchase price.

When you might actually need premium features

We're not trying to capture every centrifuge sale. Some applications genuinely benefit from expensive features:

Ultracentrifugation requirements 

If you need forces above 21,000 x g, you're looking at ultracentrifuges that exceed what benchtop models provide. 

Extensive rotor libraries 

 If your lab uses specialized rotors that only one manufacturer makes, compatibility may override cost considerations.

GLP/GMP validation packages 

If your regulatory environment demands extensive documentation and qualification packages, premium brands may offer validation support worth paying for. 

Institutional purchasing agreements

 If your organization has contracts that are impossible to get around, you're stuck with what procurement allows.

The applications where reliable lab centrifuges work perfectly

Molecular biology 

 Pelleting bacteria, precipitating nucleic acids, clearing lysates - standard protocols that work identically on any properly functioning centrifuge.

Clinical diagnostics

  Serum and plasma preparation, sample processing for analysis - consistent separation doesn't require premium pricing.

Cell culture

 Harvesting suspension cells, washing pellets, preparing cells for passage - your cells don't know what brand centrifuge they're in.

Quick spins and PCR prep

 Quick spins and PCR prep

Collecting liquid at the bottom of tubes, spinning down condensation - mini centrifuges do this job at $240.

When your lab uses reliable centrifuges for appropriate applications, you're making smart purchasing decisions - not compromising quality.


Types of Scilogex benchtop centrifuges

Mini centrifuges

What they're for: Quick spins to collect liquid at the bottom of tubes, spinning down PCR reactions, removing condensation from tube walls.

Key models:

When to choose mini centrifuges: You need a dedicated unit at each bench station for quick spins. You're doing PCR prep and want to spin down reagents before opening tubes. You don't need high g-forces - just consistent collection of liquid at the tube bottom.

High-speed microcentrifuges

What they're for: Pelleting bacteria and cells, precipitating nucleic acids and proteins, clearing cell lysates, any application requiring high g-force with small-volume tubes.

Key models:

  • SCI-12 - 15,000 RPM, 12-place rotor for 1.5/2.0mL tubes
  • SCI24 - 15,000 RPM, 24-place rotor for higher throughput

When to choose high-speed microcentrifuges: You're doing molecular biology work requiring 10,000+ x g. You process multiple samples and need 12-24 tube capacity. You don't need refrigeration - your samples tolerate room temperature during centrifugation.

Refrigerated microcentrifuge

What it's for: Any application where temperature-sensitive samples need high-speed centrifugation. Protein work, enzyme isolation, RNA processing, and protocols where heat buildup would compromise sample integrity.

Key models:

  • SCI-1524R - 15,000 RPM, -20°C to 40°C temperature range, 24-place rotor included

When to choose refrigerated: You work with proteins, enzymes, or RNA that degrade at elevated temperatures. Your protocols specify cold centrifugation. You need to maintain 4°C or lower throughout the run.

Low-speed clinical centrifuges

What they're for: Separating serum and plasma, processing blood samples, general clinical laboratory work where you need larger tube capacity at moderate speeds.

Key models:

  • SCI506 - 5,000 RPM, 6 x 1.5-15mL capacity
  • SCI412 - 4,500 RPM, 8 x 1.5-15mL capacity
  • SCI406 - 4,000 RPM, 6 x 50mL or 6 x 15mL capacity

When to choose low-speed centrifuges: You're processing clinical samples in 15mL or 50mL tubes. You need moderate speeds (300-5,000 RPM) rather than high-speed microcentrifugation. Your applications don't require forces above 3,000-4,000 x g.

Hematocrit centrifuge

What it's for: Measuring packed cell volume in blood samples using capillary tubes. Standard equipment for hematology labs and blood banks.

Key models:

  • SCI24H - 24 capillary tube capacity, digital display

When to choose hematocrit centrifuge: You're running hematocrit tests as part of routine blood work. You need the specific rotor design for capillary tubes.

Multipurpose centrifuge

What it's for: Labs that need flexibility to handle different tube sizes from 3mL to 100mL without buying multiple dedicated centrifuges.

Key models:

  • SCI636 - 6,000 RPM, handles 3mL to 100mL tubes with interchangeable rotors

When to choose multipurpose: You work with multiple tube formats and don't want to buy separate centrifuges for each. You need moderate speeds with maximum flexibility.


Where are Scilogex laboratory centrifuges being used today? 

Molecular biology labs

High-speed centrifugation is fundamental to molecular biology protocols. Researchers use Scilogex microcentrifuges to pellet bacteria before plasmid prep, precipitate DNA and RNA with alcohol, clear cell lysates before column purification, and process PCR cleanup reactions. The SCI-12 and SCI24 deliver the 15,000 RPM these protocols require at prices that preserve grant funding for reagents.



Clinical and diagnostic laboratories

Clinical labs process high volumes of patient samples daily where consistent separation directly impacts test accuracy. Scilogex low-speed centrifuges support serum and plasma preparation, sample processing for chemistry panels, and routine specimen handling. The SCI506 at $520 makes it practical to have dedicated centrifuges at multiple workstations instead of sharing one expensive unit.



Cell culture facilities

Cell culture work requires gentle separation that doesn't damage cells. Labs use Scilogex centrifuges to harvest suspension cultures, wash cell pellets during media changes, process primary cell isolations, and prepare cells for cryopreservation. The refrigerated SCI-1524R maintains cold temperatures during extended runs when cell viability matters.



Biochemistry and protein research

Protein work demands cold processing to prevent degradation and maintain enzyme activity. The SCI-1524R refrigerated microcentrifuge supports cell lysis and lysate clarification, protein precipitation protocols, subcellular fractionation procedures, and enzyme isolation where temperature control throughout the run preserves sample integrity.



Academic research and teaching labs

Universities and teaching labs need reliable equipment that handles diverse applications from multiple users without breaking the budget. Scilogex centrifuges serve graduate student research projects, undergraduate teaching laboratories, and core facility shared equipment pools. The straightforward operation means less training time and fewer user errors.



Quality control and analytical labs

QC environments require consistent sample processing for valid results. Applications include sample preparation for analytical testing, processing stability study samples, and routine sample handling where reproducible centrifugation supports validated protocols.


Why do your colleagues choose Scilogex over premium centrifuge brands?

Lab technicians and researchers

Identical separation results

The physics of centrifugation doesn't change based on what brand name is on the housing. 15,000 RPM at a given rotor radius produces the same g-force whether you're using a $1,500 Scilogex or a $5,000 premium brand. Researchers switching from expensive centrifuges report no difference in their pellets, their nucleic acid yields, or their protein recoveries - just more money left in the lab budget for other needs. 

Equipment that just works

Nothing derails a research day like equipment failures during critical experiments. Scilogex centrifuges run reliably, maintain speed consistently, and don't require the constant attention that temperamental premium equipment sometimes demands. When your centrifuge works predictably, you can focus on your science instead of troubleshooting equipment. 

Principal investigators and lab managers

Budget flexibility

PIs managing lab budgets appreciate equipment that delivers performance without consuming the entire equipment allocation. The difference between Scilogex centrifuges and premium alternatives often covers months of reagent supply, a set of micropipettes, or other equipment your lab actually needs. Smart purchasing means better-equipped labs overall. 

Predictable costs

The 2-year warranty and brushless motor design eliminate the surprise repair bills and service contracts that premium equipment often requires. You know what you're paying upfront, and you're not budgeting for annual maintenance agreements on top of the purchase price. 

Defensible purchasing decisions

When department chairs or grants administrators question equipment purchases, it's easier to justify reliable equipment at reasonable prices than premium brands with features you'll never use. 

Lab directors and procurement teams

Scaling equipment across multiple labs

Directors overseeing multiple research groups appreciate equipment that can be deployed broadly without consuming entire capital equipment budgets. Outfitting several workstations with Scilogex centrifuges costs roughly the same as one premium brand unit - that's meaningful when you're trying to support an expanding research program. 

Grant budget optimization

Every dollar saved on equipment is a dollar available for personnel, consumables, or additional experiments. Equipment that delivers identical results at lower cost directly improves the productivity of research funding. 

Reduced administrative burden

Simpler purchasing, no service contracts to manage, and reliable operation means less time dealing with equipment issues and more time focusing on research direction and program development.


How do these compare to Eppendorf, Thermo Fisher, and Beckman centrifuges?  

 When evaluating benchtop centrifuges, labs often default to premium brands based on reputation and the assumption that higher prices mean better performance. Here's an honest comparison.

What we're not trying to be

Scilogex centrifuges are not designed to compete with ultracentrifuges, specialized research instruments, or equipment for applications requiring unique rotor configurations that only one manufacturer makes. If you need programmable acceleration profiles, extensive data logging, or specific specialty rotors, buy the brand that offers them.

What we actually deliver

For the core function of a laboratory centrifuge - spinning samples at specified speeds to separate them by density - Scilogex delivers equivalent results.

Specification Scilogex range Premium brands
Maximum speed (microcentrifuges)
15,000 RPM
14,000-15,000 RPM
Maximum RCF
21,380 x g
20,000-21,000 x g
Temperature range (refrigerated)
-20°C to 40°C
-20°C to 40°C
Motor type
Brushless DC
Brushless DC
Noise levels
Comparable
Comparable
Price range
$240-$5,400
$500-$15,000+

The math is straightforward

Your bacterial pellet doesn't know whether it was spun in a $1,500 centrifuge or a $5,000 centrifuge. Your serum separates at the same g-force regardless of brand. Your nucleic acid precipitation works the same either way.

The difference shows up in your budget, not in your results.

  When premium brands actually make sense

 

You need specific rotors that only one manufacturer makes

 

Your protocols are validated on specific equipment and revalidation costs exceed equipment savings

 

  You have institutional purchasing agreements that can't be avoided

 

You need features like advanced programming, network connectivity, or specialized data logging that Scilogex doesn't offer

  For most routine benchtop centrifuge applications, you're paying for the brand name, not for better separation.  


How do you choose the right laboratory centrifuge?

1. What tube sizes do you use?
Microtubes (0.2-2.0mL)

You need a microcentrifuge or mini centrifuge. High-speed models (SCI-12, SCI24) for pelleting applications, mini centrifuges (EZee, EZee Pro) for quick spins.


Standard tubes (15mL, 50mL)

You need a low-speed clinical centrifuge (SCI506, SCI412, SCI406) or multipurpose centrifuge (SCI636).

Mixed tube sizes

Consider the multipurpose SCI636 with interchangeable rotors, or budget for both a microcentrifuge and a low-speed unit.

2. What g-force do your protocols require?
Under 5,000 x g

Low-speed centrifuges handle most clinical applications, cell pelleting at moderate speeds, and general sample processing.


5,000-21,000 x g​
High-speed microcentrifuges are necessary for pelleting bacteria, precipitating nucleic acids, and molecular biology applications requiring high centrifugal force.

Above 21,000 x g

You're looking at ultracentrifuges beyond the benchtop category.


3. Do your samples need temperature control?
Room temperature is fine

Most standard centrifuges work perfectly for protocols that don't specify cold conditions. Save money and choose non-refrigerated models.


Cold centrifugation required
If your protocols specify 4°C or your samples are temperature-sensitive (proteins, enzymes, RNA), you need the refrigerated SCI-1524R.
4. How many samples do you process at once?
Low throughput (1-12 samples)

The SCI-12 microcentrifuge or low-speed models with smaller rotors handle typical batch sizes efficiently.


Higher throughput (24+ samples)
The SCI24 microcentrifuge or multipurpose SCI636 with larger rotor options increase capacity per run.

Quick spins at every bench
Mini centrifuges at $240-$440 make it practical to have dedicated units at each workstation.
 ​
5. What's your budget reality?
Under $500

Mini centrifuges (EZee at $240, EZee Pro at $440) or the SCI506 low-speed centrifuge at $520.


$1,000-$3,000
High-speed microcentrifuges (SCI-12 at $1,500, SCI24 at $2,700) or low-speed clinical models.

$3,000-$5,500 
Refrigerated microcentrifuge (SCI-1524R at $5,400), multipurpose centrifuge (SCI636 at $3,300), or hematocrit centrifuge (SCI24H at $3,270).​


What determines laboratory centrifuge price?

When evaluating centrifuge pricing, understanding what drives cost helps identify where to spend and where to save.

Speed and RCF capability

Higher maximum speeds and g-forces require more powerful motors and stronger construction to handle the mechanical stresses. High-speed microcentrifuges cost more than low-speed clinical models because of these engineering requirements. 

Refrigeration system

 Active cooling adds significant cost. Compressors, insulated chambers, and temperature control electronics make refrigerated centrifuges more expensive than ambient-temperature models. Only pay for refrigeration if your applications actually require it.

Rotor capacity and design

Larger rotors, specialized rotor designs (like hematocrit rotors), and bio-containment features add manufacturing cost. Consider whether you need the capacity or if smaller, simpler rotors meet your needs. 

Motor and drive system

Brushless DC motors cost more upfront but eliminate ongoing brush replacement costs and service requirements. This is an area where higher initial cost reduces total cost of ownership.

Control systems

Digital displays, microprocessor controls, and programming capabilities add complexity and cost compared to analog controls. Consider whether your protocols actually require programmable features or if basic speed and time settings suffice.

Brand premium and marketing

Premium brands spend heavily on marketing, sales infrastructure, and brand positioning - costs that get passed to buyers without improving centrifugation performance. This is where Scilogex pricing differs most from premium competition.  


Frequently asked questions about laboratory centrifuges

Basic centrifuge questions

A centrifuge is a laboratory instrument that spins samples at high speed to separate them by density. The spinning motion creates centrifugal force that pushes denser materials (like cells, proteins, or precipitates) toward the bottom of the tube while less dense materials (like supernatant liquid) stay at the top. This separation principle is fundamental to countless laboratory protocols in molecular biology, clinical diagnostics, biochemistry, and cell culture. 

 A centrifuge works by spinning a rotor containing sample tubes at high speed. The rotation creates centrifugal force - the same force that pushes you outward on a spinning carnival ride. This force acts on particles in your sample based on their density, size, and shape. Denser particles experience more force and move faster toward the bottom of the tube, creating a pellet. Less dense liquid remains as supernatant above the pellet.

A benchtop centrifuge is a laboratory centrifuge designed to sit on a standard lab bench rather than on the floor. These compact units handle most routine centrifugation needs including microcentrifugation, clinical sample processing, and general laboratory separation tasks. Benchtop centrifuges typically reach speeds up to 15,000-20,000 RPM and generate forces up to about 21,000 x g - sufficient for most applications outside of ultracentrifugation. 

 A microcentrifuge is a benchtop centrifuge specifically designed for small-volume tubes, typically 0.2mL to 2.0mL microcentrifuge tubes. Microcentrifuges reach high speeds (up to 15,000+ RPM) and generate high g-forces needed for molecular biology applications like pelleting bacteria, precipitating nucleic acids, and clearing cell lysates. They're compact, fast, and essential equipment for any molecular biology or biochemistry lab.

RPM (revolutions per minute) measures how fast the rotor spins. RCF (relative centrifugal force), expressed as "x g," measures the actual force applied to your samples. RCF depends on both RPM and rotor radius - the same RPM produces different g-forces in different rotors. Scientific protocols typically specify RCF because it's the actual force that matters for separation, regardless of which centrifuge you use. The formula is: RCF = 1.118 x 10^-5 x r x RPM^2, where r is the rotor radius in centimeters. 

 A refrigerated centrifuge has a built-in cooling system that maintains cold temperatures during centrifugation. Regular (ambient) centrifuges don't control temperature - in fact, high-speed spinning generates heat through friction and motor operation, which can warm samples during extended runs. Refrigerated centrifuges are essential for temperature-sensitive samples like proteins, enzymes, and RNA that degrade at elevated temperatures.

The main rotor types are fixed-angle rotors and swinging-bucket rotors. Fixed-angle rotors hold tubes at a constant angle (typically 45°) during centrifugation - particles pellet against the tube wall and slide to the bottom. Swinging-bucket rotors allow tubes to swing outward during spinning, creating pellets at the very bottom of the tube. Fixed-angle rotors are more common in microcentrifuges and work well for most pelleting applications. Swinging-bucket rotors are better for density gradient separations. 

Application questions

 The appropriate speed depends on what you're trying to pellet. General guidelines: mammalian cells typically pellet at 300-500 x g; bacteria require 3,000-5,000 x g; precipitated proteins and nucleic acids typically use 10,000-20,000 x g; serum/plasma separation uses 1,500-3,000 x g. Always follow your specific protocol's specifications, as excessive speed can damage cells or compact pellets too tightly for resuspension.

Centrifugation time depends on your application and the g-force being used. Quick spins to collect liquid at the tube bottom take just a few seconds. Pelleting bacteria typically requires 5-10 minutes at 3,000-5,000 x g. Nucleic acid precipitation may need 10-30 minutes depending on the protocol. Serum separation usually takes 10-15 minutes. Follow your protocol specifications - longer isn't always better, and over-centrifugation can damage samples or create pellets that are difficult to resuspend.

You need refrigeration if your protocols specify cold centrifugation (typically 4°C), if you work with temperature-sensitive samples like proteins, enzymes, or RNA, or if your centrifugation runs are long enough that heat buildup would compromise sample integrity. For quick spins, routine DNA work, and applications where samples tolerate room temperature, standard centrifuges work fine and cost less.

Most molecular biology work requires a high-speed microcentrifuge capable of 10,000-15,000 RPM (up to 21,000 x g) for pelleting bacteria, precipitating nucleic acids, and clearing lysates. A mini centrifuge at each bench station is helpful for quick spins during PCR setup. If you work extensively with RNA or proteins, a refrigerated microcentrifuge protects temperature-sensitive samples.

Clinical sample processing (serum/plasma separation, routine specimen handling) typically requires low-speed centrifuges in the 3,000-5,000 RPM range that accommodate 15mL or 50mL tubes. Hematocrit testing requires a specialized hematocrit centrifuge. High-speed microcentrifuges aren't typically necessary for routine clinical work unless you're also doing molecular diagnostics.

Purchasing and comparison questions

Premium centrifuge prices reflect several factors: brand reputation and marketing costs, extensive rotor libraries, advanced programming and connectivity features, specialized compliance documentation, and the assumption that labs will pay premium prices for familiar brand names. For the core function of spinning samples, mid-priced centrifuges deliver identical separation results at 40-60% lower cost.

There's an important distinction between "cheap" and "affordable." Cheap equipment cuts corners on components and construction, leading to poor performance and short service life. Affordable equipment (like Scilogex) delivers reliable performance at reasonable prices by eliminating premium brand markups and unnecessary features. For routine applications, a well-built affordable centrifuge produces the same separation results as premium equipment - your pellet doesn't know what brand centrifuge it came from.

For core centrifugation performance (speed, g-force, temperature control), Scilogex and Eppendorf centrifuges are comparable. Eppendorf offers more extensive rotor options, advanced programming features, and established brand recognition. Scilogex offers equivalent separation results at 40-60% lower cost with 2-year warranties. If you need specific Eppendorf rotors or your protocols were validated on Eppendorf equipment, stick with Eppendorf. For routine applications, the centrifugation results are identical - the difference is in your equipment budget.

Well-maintained centrifuges with brushless motors typically last 10-15 years or longer with normal use. Brushless motors (standard on Scilogex high-speed models) require no brush replacements and have fewer wear components than brushed motors. Regular cleaning, proper rotor care, and avoiding overloading extend equipment life.

Maintenance questions

Basic centrifuge maintenance includes regular cleaning of the rotor and chamber, periodic inspection of the door gasket, ensuring proper ventilation around the unit, and following manufacturer guidelines for rotor care. For centrifuges with brushless motors (like Scilogex models), no motor maintenance is required. Rotors should be inspected periodically for corrosion or damage and replaced if necessary.

Calibration frequency depends on your application and regulatory requirements. Research labs typically verify speed annually or when results seem inconsistent. Clinical and regulated laboratories may require more frequent calibration checks per their quality protocols. If your centrifuge has a digital display, verify that the displayed speed matches actual speed periodically.

Stop the centrifuge immediately if you hear unusual sounds. Once stopped, carefully remove the rotor and assess the damage. Clean up any spilled material according to your lab's protocols for the sample type - biohazardous materials require appropriate decontamination procedures. Inspect the rotor for damage and autoclave if working with hazardous materials. Check the centrifuge chamber for contamination and clean as needed before resuming use.

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Scilogex only guarantees quality and excellence. Serving laboratories for all areas of research for many years already, we offer a wide range of innovative benchtop equipment designed to meet requirements and budget of virtually any laboratory. Operate at your highest level of efficiency with our advanced line of liquid handling and laboratory products manufactured by our partners in ISO90001 facilities and are UL approved with cTUVus and cSAus certifications.

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