In anatomy departments and university teaching hospitals operating cadaver-based teaching dissection, where cadavers move between storage, dissection rooms, and teaching theatres, the RD-802 delivered through Medigear.uk supports the cadaver handling workflow with universal Roundfin body tray compatibility — bodies transfer between the RD-802 trolley and the rest of the Roundfin equipment fleet on the same 1940 × 580 mm tray without re-handling. The hydraulic lifting system supports operator height adjustment during cadaver positioning for teaching dissection.
In forensic examination services and coronial mortuary services where the workflow requires cadaver transport between examination rooms, refrigerator storage, and processing areas with cross-product tray compatibility, the RD-802 supports the universal tray workflow that the RD-800S and RD-801S siblings cannot deliver. The hydraulic lifting system supports equipment-height matching during transfers between refrigerator chambers, storage rack tiers, and examination tables on a single trolley.
For medical schools, anatomy departments, and university teaching hospitals deploying cadaver handling equipment across teaching dissection rooms, Medigear. UK's RD-802 is a universal-tray-compatible cadaver transfer trolley that integrates with refrigerator chambers, storage racks, and body tray family equipment already deployed across the teaching estate. The rail-and-rack frame above the body tray supports equipment used during cadaver-handling teaching modules.
In research laboratories where cadaver-based research protocols require cross-product workflow integration between cadaver storage, research dissection tables, and post-procedure return to storage, Medigear.uk supplies the RD-802 to research institutions, university medical research departments, and contract research organisations. The universal tray compatibility helps integrate research workflows across the Roundfin equipment fleet, and the hydraulic lifting system supports ergonomic operator positioning during sustained research dissection sessions.

