Dental Equipment Dental Electric Motor with Touch Button
Product Description
Dental Equipment Dental Electric Motor with Touch Button
A dental electric motor is the modern, high-tech successor to the traditional air-driven dental handpiece (the "drill").
It's an electric motor that fits inside the dental handpiece itself or is connected to it via a small, flexible cord, providing the power for cutting, shaping, and polishing teeth during procedures like fillings, crowns, and implant placement.
Electric dental handpiece motors are an alternative to air turbine powered handpiece motors. ... Often quieter then their air turbine counterparts, the electric dental handpiece employs high torque and boasts precision cutting with less vibration.
Key Components:
Control Unit (Console): The brain of the system. It allows the dentist to precisely set:
Speed (RPM): From very low (e.g., 100 RPM for implants) to very high (e.g., 200,000 RPM for cavity preparation).
Torque (Power): The rotational force. Dentists can set high torque for demanding tasks like removing old crowns.
Direction: Forward or reverse.
Motor Body (or Micromotor): This is the handheld part that contains the electric motor. It's slightly larger than an air-driven handpiece but is ergonomically designed. It connects to the control unit via a cord.
Surgical or High-Speed Handpiece: The electric motor body attaches to these specialized handpieces. The motor typically drives low-speed procedures (like polishing, drilling pins, or implant surgery) directly. For high-speed cutting (like preparing a cavity), the motor attaches to a separate high-speed handpiece which contains its own internal turbine.