Forums
New posts
Search forums
What's new
New posts
Latest activity
Articles
Members
Current visitors
Log in
Register
What's new
Search
Search
Search titles only
New posts
Search forums
Menu
Log in
Register
Install the app
Install
Forums
Lab talk, the good, the bad, and the ugly
Dental-CAD
i-Tero system from Cadent.
JavaScript is disabled. For a better experience, please enable JavaScript in your browser before proceeding.
You are using an out of date browser. It may not display this or other websites correctly.
You should upgrade or use an
alternative browser
.
Reply to thread
Message
<blockquote data-quote="halfshaft5" data-source="post: 14555" data-attributes="member: 366"><p>As a Inlab owner since its introduction in late 2001, I have grown with Sirona, I am a inhouse lab and rely on highly qualified Dentists to send me the "Hard Stuff" to do and have been very successful, now Sirona didn't meet my expecations right off the bat with In-Ceram and Pro-Cad as a restoration choice but the last 4 years I have been burning up with YZ/Zir-Cad and Lithium dissilcate(EMAX). The Dr. I am in house with bought a I-Tero scanner and he had a ton of problems with them for several months on the billed him and he still didnt have a scanner, finally when it arrived it took another 4 weeks for them to do get training to the office so he just sent it back and then had words with Cadent and long story short they dont like each other. He has since bought a Cerec AC unit and its works great, I actually borrow it every once in a while to get the shots of deep subginival margins on some of my cases, I love it. Also being a speaker and consultant for the Cerec Chairside and Inlab systems I know that the Blue Cam is only for the Dr's right now and wont be available for a few years for labs. I have also done several Cerec Connect cases with some doctors and the models are good, a whole lot better than 3M's steriolithography system that they have but not there yet, as a template to hold the crown its good, but to finish or bake margins too, still too rough in my opinion. With all this said, I really think Sirona is got it, the "powderless" impression might be coming but with teeth acting different to all different spectums of light with different wavlengths and refraction properties, I see only a different technology going to be used to get the Powderless impression. Technologies like Doppler, and Measurable Density Imagining will eventually come into the marketplace as the scanner of choice but as for today, The Blue Cam is the best...... My $.02 worth</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="halfshaft5, post: 14555, member: 366"] As a Inlab owner since its introduction in late 2001, I have grown with Sirona, I am a inhouse lab and rely on highly qualified Dentists to send me the "Hard Stuff" to do and have been very successful, now Sirona didn't meet my expecations right off the bat with In-Ceram and Pro-Cad as a restoration choice but the last 4 years I have been burning up with YZ/Zir-Cad and Lithium dissilcate(EMAX). The Dr. I am in house with bought a I-Tero scanner and he had a ton of problems with them for several months on the billed him and he still didnt have a scanner, finally when it arrived it took another 4 weeks for them to do get training to the office so he just sent it back and then had words with Cadent and long story short they dont like each other. He has since bought a Cerec AC unit and its works great, I actually borrow it every once in a while to get the shots of deep subginival margins on some of my cases, I love it. Also being a speaker and consultant for the Cerec Chairside and Inlab systems I know that the Blue Cam is only for the Dr's right now and wont be available for a few years for labs. I have also done several Cerec Connect cases with some doctors and the models are good, a whole lot better than 3M's steriolithography system that they have but not there yet, as a template to hold the crown its good, but to finish or bake margins too, still too rough in my opinion. With all this said, I really think Sirona is got it, the "powderless" impression might be coming but with teeth acting different to all different spectums of light with different wavlengths and refraction properties, I see only a different technology going to be used to get the Powderless impression. Technologies like Doppler, and Measurable Density Imagining will eventually come into the marketplace as the scanner of choice but as for today, The Blue Cam is the best...... My $.02 worth [/QUOTE]
Insert quotes…
Verification
Who makes the popular shade guide?
Post reply
Forums
Lab talk, the good, the bad, and the ugly
Dental-CAD
i-Tero system from Cadent.
Top
Bottom