For more than thirty-years, Spectrum Aeromed has designed, prototyped, manufactured, and installed comprehensive Emergency Medical Service (EMS) interiors in both fixed and rotary-wing aircraft. The company’s Infinity 5000X medical station instantiates the state of art in onboard patient monitoring and care.
Modular and customizable, the Infinity 5000X system comprises one common base which secures to extant aircraft seat-tracks or floor hardpoints via integral locking mechanisms. In addition to housing the entirety of the system’s controls and gauges, the base unit includes a 3,500 liter oxygen tank, two air compressors with system pressure gauge, a vacuum pump with system vacuum gauge, a one-thousand-watt inverter and/or converter by which to power the system’s three AC power outlets, dual USB ports, multiple I.V. pole mounting locations, and a stretcher bridge that allows medical personnel unobstructed access to patients both in-flight and during transfer onto and off of the unit’s removable stretcher.
The Infinity 5000X’s stretcher can be easily removed from the base unit by manipulating a single switch, and returned to the base just as easily. In-flight, patients are secured by means of a conventional belt-restraint system.
By unifying the Infinity 5000X’s base and stretcher, Spectrum Aeromed is able to produce the system more efficiently and at lower end cost. Customers may purchase the complete Infinity 5000X unit, or acquire such by individual components.
The Infinity 5000X pulls 28-volts from the host aircraft’s electrical system and routs such to the unit’s power management architecture. Ergo, aircraft modification is, most often, limited to the installation of a single cannon-plug.
Spectrum Aeromed designed the Infinity 5000X to enable crews to ply their expertise, experience, and determination to the business of saving lives, not the folly of fumbling around overcrowded, disorganized aircraft interiors searching for critical equipment and resources. Spectrum Aeromed VP & accounting executive Matthew Christenson remarked: “We are very excited to introduce our new equipment model and features to the air ambulance community.”
Founded in 1991, Spectrum Aeromed operates in a 17,000-square-foot state-of-the-art facility at Fargo, North Dakota’s Hector International Airport. The company has designed air ambulance medical interiors for hospital programs, worldwide militaries, multi-mission charters and private operators, as well as custom VIP emergency medical interior suites for executive aircraft and heads of state.
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