Re: BD Analyzers + ARIA sorter

From: <akos.szilvasi@novartis.com>
Date: Mon Nov 26 2007 - 09:41:00 EST
Our experience is between Ariel's and Alice's. We operate 2 ARIA sorters 
(one about 4 years old, the other - UV laser equipped - is a year and a 
half). Besides those we also have 3 LSRIIs of different configurations and 
age (2, 3 and 4 lasers) all outfitted with HTS samplers.

For to me unknown reasons the old LSRII and the old ARIA sorter are the 
most robust and reliable instruments. We do not have service or quality 
issues beyond normal wear. The 2005 purchased ARIA Special order (UV 
laser, LSR-like optical design) had an out of the box bacterial 
contamination problem that BD could not eliminate and the most aggressive 
bleaching procedure only offers temporary solution. (We remedied it by 
running 70% ethanol from the dest. water tank so that the lines are filled 
with alcohol over night - a suggestion from the Sloan-Kettering lab.) We 
never experienced any contamination coming from the old Aria sorter. The 
Aria's fluidic system is the operator's nightmare. It is complicated 
beyond imagination and prone to harbor bacteria, the solenoid, valves and 
the maze of lines...and what not, develop problems occasionally. I wish we 
could have an Aria sorter with the MoFlo-like simple fluidic system. Both 
sorters needed the replacement circuit boards that drives and controls the 
droplet charges. They come at $ 6500 each. Guess how much a computer costs 
when you want to replace the aging HP the instrument came with?

The "black box" design turns many advanced users off. I agree that the 
MoFlo offers a clear layout, open architecture but I consider the Aria 
more "modular" than the MoFlo. It is not as readily expandable as the 
MoFlo (adding more lasers is trickier - if possible at all in the lab) but 
when it comes to servicing the Aria seems to be easier. That is based on 
what I had seen when engineers worked on the sorters.

As to the sheath tank of the LSRII, we bought the 25 liters steel 
canisters from BD, put them on a bathroom scale (that shows when they need 
to be refilled) and use them happily for years. The HTS samplers are the 
best I have seen out there. 

The Diva? What's wrong with Diva 5? In my opinion the best acquisition 
application ever. It is (now) stable, robust, intuitive with only a few 
glitches and minor bugs. We had some fuzzy problems with compensation 
samples. Our users (who want to learn the LSRII operation) get trained in 
one hour and rarely need follow-up instructions. That includes the HTS 
use. 

Overall, we like the Aria sorters and the LSRII analyzers. We experience 
more of less the same problems other labs do. Our BD field service in the 
Boston area is great. That may have something to do with Debbie 
Ahern-Ridlon working with Novartis after long years at BD. If you don't 
have service contracts you may experience some reluctance and pressure by 
the BD tech support but we never had issues with the local service group. 

If someone is on the market for a new sorter keep an eye on the (somewhat) 
redesigned MoFlo. It is now digital, much faster than the Aria but still a 
monster. The Beckman-Coulter acquisition of the cytometry unit from Dako 
may revitalize those great lines of instruments.

Akos

__________________________ 
Akos Szilvasi
NIBRI Core Laboratory Services
manager
USCA, 601-5301
Novartis Institutes for BioMedical
Research, Inc.
100 Technology Square
Cambridge, MA 02139
USA
Phone: +1 617 8717177
Email : akos.szilvasi@novartis.com






Alice.L.Givan@Dartmouth.EDU (Alice L. Givan) 
11/21/2007 03:49 PM

To
Cytometry Mailing List <cytometry@flowcyt.cyto.purdue.edu>
cc

Subject
Re: Analyzers






Just wanted to counterbalance Uriel's comments on the BD Aria.		 I 
trust him and his
description of the Aria in his facility.  However, we have had an Aria for 
about four
years now and we think it is terrific.		 It sorts for about 8-10 
hours every day.  We have
had very little trouble with it.  We have not had a service contract 
(since the initial
warranty ran out) -- and BD technical support is extremely helpful to us 
over the phone
(with hour-long conversations and complete descriptions of what parts we 
should order and
how to put them in on our own).

So, it may be that there are some lemon Arias out there.  But we are very 
happy with our
non-lemon.

Alice

Alice L. Givan
Englert Cell Analysis Laboratory
of the Norris Cotton Cancer Center
Dartmouth Medical School
Lebanon, NH 03756 USA
tel 603-650-7661
fax 603-650-6130
givan@dartmouth.edu
www.dartmouth.edu/~celllab



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Received on Mon Nov 26 14:18:00 2007

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