We will reply to your message within an hour.
Squeeze the bulb to dispense liquids one drop at a time. These droppers are also known as transfer pipettes.
These bottles have a squeeze-bulb dropper attached to the lid.
Also known as basters, these dispensers transfer larger amounts of liquid than bulb droppers. Liquids are dispensed in a stream, rather than drop by drop.
Cover the top opening with your thumb to control the flow of liquid one drop at a time.
These fixed-volume micropipettes dispense a small amount of liquid for speedy, routine dispensing jobs.
Transfer measured streams of liquid.
Use these glass pipettes with pipette pumps.
Draw and dispense liquids at a controlled speed. These pumps give you more control of flow than a basic pipette bulb but not as much as an electronic pump.
Pipette for hours on end—these ergonomic pipettors maintain even flow with just the push of a button.
The simplest form of a pipette pump, these bulbs let you control flow as you quickly draw and dispense liquid. Use them with a pipette.
More precise than pipettes, burettes have a stopcock that allows you to release liquids in tiny drops.
Reduce errors and increase accuracy--these burettes have a digital readout, so you don't have to calculate how much liquid you've dispensed.
Fill and dispense 96 wells all at once.
To make sure these reservoirs arrive sterile, they've been irradiated, individually bagged, and marked with a lot number.
Dispense a sample many times without refilling your pipettor. No need to autoclave these tips before first use—they’re cleaned and bagged to prevent contamination.
Hold reagents and samples for easy access during pipetting.
Squeeze out liquids one drop at a time.
Identify contents at a glance with these sets of 25 bottles in five lid colors.
Add a needle with a luer lock connection and squeeze to dispense a single drop or a stream of liquid.