In NHS Trust mortuary departments deploying primary autopsy workstation plus utility station configurations, where the primary autopsy table provides the working surface and the RD-118 delivers integrated washing, shower, crusher, and electrical services, the RD-118, delivered through Medigear.uk, supports the two-workstation mortuary room configuration. The compact 810 × 630 mm against-wall footprint preserves floor area for the primary workstation; the 1820 mm tall vertical tower architecture provides services at standing height within easy reach of the operator at the primary workstation.
For university anatomy departments and medical college anatomy teaching laboratories operating multi-station teaching deployments where each teaching position requires utility services (washing, shower, crusher, electrical) alongside the primary working table, the RD-118, delivered through Medigear.uk, provides the teaching room utility station specification. The integrated four-service architecture eliminates the need for multiple separate fixtures at each teaching position, supporting teaching room layout efficiency.
In NHS Trust forensic pathology services and Home Office forensic pathology workflows, where forensic specimen examination requires utility services alongside the primary forensic workstation, the RD-118 supports the forensic examination room utility-station configuration. The water-pressure aspirator architecture (brochure feature 4) delivers suction without electrical pumps — reducing failure modes and supporting sustained forensic examination workflow throughput across busy examination cycles.
In veterinary necropsy facilities, research anatomical laboratories, and biosecurity pathology research workflows, where utility services support primary specimen workstations and workflow throughput, Medigear.uk supplies the RD-118 to veterinary services, university anatomical departments, and research institutions. The brochure application list explicitly includes laboratory, forensic examination, anatomy, medical colleges, and hospitals across cross-sector procurement frameworks.
