Spengler’s latest sphygmomanometer, the MOBI, is the result of many years of design, work, prototyping and testing. Since 1907, we have been paying special attention to detail, the hallmark of a Spengler sphygmomanometer.
The Mobi sphygmomanometer is equipped with our latest generation of pressure relief valve. This new valve has been specially designed by our teams to make the Mobi sphygmomanometer even more accurate and more pleasant to use. Its ergonomic design provides very high accuracy at deflation thanks to a smooth and fluid rotation.
Our teams have improved the rotation of the valve, thus reducing friction during valve rotation and at the same time reducing the risk of jolts responsible for excessive decompression and loss of precision. The attention paid to the machining of the thread has been increased, in order to offer very great flexibility of use and a perfectly linear deflation.
48 is the number of prototypes that were designed and tested before we found what we believe is the perfect faucet. Patrick Jouffret designer and founder of Atelier 360.
The new geometry of our valve was no easy task. Our objective was ambitious: to design a pressure relief valve without compromising on ease of use, deflation accuracy or elegance. Yes, it’s a Spengler…
The Mobi project was born out of the idea of reinventing the sphygmomanometer that we invented in 1907, starting from a blank sheet of paper and meeting the expectations of today’s healthcare professionals. Never in Spengler’s long history have we paid so much attention to detail. The decompression valve is a perfect illustration of this, a real project within the project, alongside many others: the cuffs, the tubing, the pear or the mechanism to name but a few. Nicolas Lachaux in charge of innovation