|
Prev: what is latest in stem cell research and its application in dentistry
Next: 3 month new dentures
From: donna.riggins on 10 Nov 2005 20:56 I am a dental lab owner from massachusetts and I just lost my first account to the dreaded Cerec machine. Any comments on how this machine?
From: StovePipe on 11 Nov 2005 08:26 donna.riggins(a)comcast.net a écrit : > I am a dental lab owner from massachusetts and I just lost my first > account to the dreaded Cerec machine. Any comments on how this machine? ------------------------- I think that for yourself, the best way to 'know the enemy' would be to ask to see the work that is possible in a real patient's mouth. Then you would be able to evaluate where and what you can do to make the lab processed in/onlays/crowns more attractive. Where I am at the moment, the CEREC dentists do onlays and the others do crowns. A few visits to your more openminded customers, with a few models with, say, a porcelain in/onlay, a Simfony inlay bridge and a gold onlay should educate them as to what is possible and to the fact that those preps are much more concervative. In most cases, if a dentist has invested in a machine, s/he won't go back. I would say that the key is to get some of your more traditional dentists doing more partial coverage work. There is a lab version of CEREC as well. If you could convince your customers to scan the teeth and send you the data via the Internet, you could perhaps deliver the milled blocks while the patient waits in the chair. One of the dentists that posts regularly here does things like cut a tooth prep, scan it, and while the machine is milling the onlay, he'll finish the root canal and then cement the thing in right then. That kind of treatment would perhaps give you enough time to get the data, grind one out and have it delivered. I hope you get some other opinions on the automated process. Cheers SP
From: Amatus Cremona on 11 Nov 2005 12:18 > >I am a dental lab owner from Massachusetts and I just lost my first > account to the dreaded Cerec machine. Any comments on how this machine? > I have all the respect in the world for dental laboratory technicians. However, with the current status of dental technology (regarding man-power and the age of the average technician), you will need to get used to it. For the really involved and difficult cases and for the FPD work, the CEREC machine cannot compare to the excellence of a GREAT laboratory technician, but for single units, well, you can expect to see less of that market in the future. Custom abutments for implants and most of the implant crowns will stay in your pallpark as well. Please hang around the NG and offer your viewpoint from the laboratory technology aspect of things. -- / Amatus / <donna.riggins(a)comcast.net> wrote in message news:1131674219.672502.134350(a)g47g2000cwa.googlegroups.com... >I am a dental lab owner from massachusetts and I just lost my first > account to the dreaded Cerec machine. Any comments on how this machine? >
|
Pages: 1 Prev: what is latest in stem cell research and its application in dentistry Next: 3 month new dentures |