For teaching you are right that the path is manual. For a limited budget Google 
for used microtomes or try eBay.
René J.

From: Debra Baluch <page.bal...@asu.edu>
To: "histonet@lists.utsouthwestern.edu" <histonet@lists.utsouthwestern.edu>
Sent: Friday, May 13, 2011 7:16 PM
Subject: [Histonet] Histology station for core lab

Hi All,
    I manage a bioimaging core facility and teach a couple of courses related 
to cell and tissue culture research and sample prep for live and fixed cell 
imaging. We have expanded to train people on the use of a cryostat, that is 
part of our core facility, and are now looking into obtaining a microtome to 
teach histological techniques.  Do you have recommendations of a good rotary 
microtome that would work well in a core facility? Most researchers in our 
department manually embed and stain so we are not as familiar with the more 
automated instruments for sample processing. Since much of the focus is in 
regards to learning the process we are leaning towards going with the more 
manual route. We are working with a limited budget so we will need to be 
somewhat conservative in the models we select.
Thanks for your suggestions,
Page

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