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Zoll AED Plus Automatic Defibrillator $2295 ($2750 Elsewhere) Delivered @ DDI Safety

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Hey,

We've just got a new supplier Zoll.
They have this great AED, the Zoll AED Plus that we are offering as a great introductory offer.
I can't find it cheaper anywhere else.

Why it's good?

It has one piece pads that mean you are less likely to mess up applying the pads.

It has sensors in it that detect how your CPR is going. They tell you when to push harder or faster, and this is so important because in the stress of an emergency most people find giving good CPR hard.

Another little bonus, it uses a generic type 123 batteries so affordable and easy to replace the batteries. maintenance costs are quite low. Has 7 year warranty, and includes a prep kit.

Let me know if you have questions

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DDI Safety
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closed Comments

  • +4

    thought it was like a Fisher Price toy laptop from the preview image :)

    • +6

      i know right. Lol if you look in new deals it looks like the sandwich maker below it a little too haha

      • haha….was just typing this!

    • +1

      I thought it looked like the sandwichmaker deal just below it, would hate to mix them up!

      • +3

        Great for Toasting…..

      • Now I'm wondering if this thing is capable of making a toasted sandwich…
        Would probably take a really long time, but may be technically possible.

        • +3

          It's not.
          :-(

          It will only apply a shock if it detects a cardiac arrest.

          The sticky residue on the pads probably doesn't taste good either

  • Hey so how does 5 yrs shelf life work with 7 yrs warranty?

    • +2

      That's the shelf life of the pads. Generally they need to be replaced if they haven't been used to keep their sticky.

      • +1

        Thanks for the reply! This is a very interesting product, never thought one of these is actually sort of affordable (I imagined these things were $10k+)…. I am seriously considering buying one but will need to hold out until I get my tax return. Thank you for answering the questions and other comments you've left clarifying the product

        • +2

          Too easy! Yeah it's pretty amazing. The same price as a high end phone but can save a life and have a long lifespan
          Let us know if you have any other questions.

  • An Extraordinary consumer product.

    • +1

      Definetly.
      An alternative way to get a shock is buy an Asus motherboard

      • +1

        Or property.

        • It's crazy at the moment hey .
          A million bucks for basic house in western Sydney

  • +1

    Thanks….

    After last Saturday, will need to take one to the Coll v Carlton game tomorrow night…

  • How much is the George Foreman model?

    • +13

      George foreman cutting out the fat has reduced our sales

  • To think it was big news when Kerry Packer made a deal with the NSW Premier to put one in every ambulance back in the day. That cost $5M and here you can buy them for a few grand.

    • It's pretty awesome that we have them so available and affordable now. Id like to see more around…. But I have ulterior motives lol

  • +1

    What the difference between this and the semi automatic one?

    • +1

      When a defibrillator analyses the heart rhythm and determines a shock is needed:

      automatic defibrillators automatically give the shock.

      Semi automatic defibrillators tell you- press button now. you press the shock button on the defib and it delivers the shock

      Some prefer the ease of automatic, others prefer the control of semi Auto

      • Is that a risk of shocking the person doing cpr when it goes off automatically?

        • +3

          It will generally say "Do not touch the patient/casualty" or "stop CPR" a few seconds before shocking.

        • +2

          The ones I have seen in video demonstrations have a loud recorded message, warning everyone to get clear, just before the shock is applied.

        • +1

          Yep! As has been commented it says stand clear. Only would be a risk if you were in an extremely loud environment such as a concert venue/loud club

  • +6

    Once you sell them all will the warehouse staff yell "Clear!"

    • +2

      Lol! One of our clients works at a nursing home and said she dances with the defib whenever the oldies are getting too excitable

      • +4

        nurse uniform and dancing….fatal combi

        • +1

          Rip

  • +1

    I have one of these at home and one at work. Haven't had to use them thankfully, but the ability to replace the batteries so easily and cheaply (at least compared to other models) is great.

    • Yeah it's pretty awesome. I think it's ease of use features like one piece CPR and the reader are great

  • +1

    Might need one if the RBA increases interest rates any further..

    • You're giving me a great promo idea….

  • The colour is pretty shocking.

    • NVIDIA green….

  • How many Eneloops does it need?

    • Lol no type 123 eneloops but plenty of duracellz

  • https://www.aedleader.com/zoll-vs-lifepak-aed-comparison/

    Its a winner, seems good price, What is shipping to 4701 also tell me to 6330. I need both thanks

    Competition and might be cheaper depends on shipping

    https://www.biofast.com.au/zoll-aed-plus-semi-automatic-defi…

    • +1

      DM me.
      We offer free shipping!

      • +1

        Ive direct messages you. Definitely worth checking out

        • Thanks need to bring it to the team, wil action tomorrow.

  • +2

    Mate I am going to +1 you purely for the quality of deal banter even if the deal itself is relatively limited mass appeal.

    • +3

      Thanks Jimothy! Nice profile pic. Much love to you Pam and the kids. Hope the sports business is working out

  • Cheers, bought 8

    • +2

      Thanks. Pretty exciting to have the general manager of KFC Australia here

  • Have been defibrillated in the past. I don't recommend it. 1 out of 7.

    Deal seems good though.

    • Oh boy. glad you are with us tho:-)

  • Cheapjack! Any board game specials?

    • Sure! If you have knife sharpener deals 😆

  • Waste of money for that Zoll and it is a foreign product.

    The CellAED device is made in Australia by an Australian company. My local St Johns Ambulance and pharmacy have one.
    https://cellaed.io/au/products

    $500, lasts for 2 years, single use though.

    or $359 plus $16.50/month subscription.

    • Cell AED is not all it appears to be.
      It's actually more expensive over 8 years than our heartsine 360p
      -it has low energy output. 68-81 joules
      -has not had published study into effectiveness
      - heartsine models over 8 year lifespan
      - difficult to use on infants, you have to remove the pads for each CPR cycle

      https://ddisafety.com.au/defibrillators/should-you-actually-…

      • It's actually more expensive over 8 years than our heartsine 360p

        Meh…I don't buy defibs expecting it to last 8 years. Plus the zoll is bulky and can't be transported in a hand bag. The CelLAED is more likely to be used because most cardiac arrests happen in the home. I doubt individuals are buying $2500 defibs for the home.

        -it has low energy output. 68-81 joules

        So what? If the TGA and European Medicines Agency gave it CE, then it obviously works.

        • +1

          While it might be tga approved, it does not meet the spec of the Australian resuscitation council. They are the peak body for first aid in Australia.

          Whats the point of buying a defib that saves less lives because of lower shock, and a defib that's way more expensive in the long run?

          • @cheapjack: Australian resuscitation council are not an authority on cardiac arrest research & defibrillation. Plenty of research overseas that supports the idea that higher shock energy does not correlate with successful defibrillation.
            European and US data are far more reliable because they deal with populations in the hundreds of millions as opposed to Australia's 20 million population.

            Whats the point of buying a defib that saves less lives because of lower shock, and a defib that's way more expensive in the long run?

            That's a blatant lie. You're misleading the public. I can already tell you're not a real health professional. Just someone pedaling lies to increase your commission. Probably a used car salesman.
            Why is it more expensive? It's $$199-250 a year. The cost of a few dinners.

            • @Hydralyte: It's not a blatant lie that higher energy defibs can save more lives.

              https://www.ahajournals.org/doi/full/10.1161/circulationaha.…

              https://www.heartsafeusa.com/physio-control/files/360J-Broch…

              Also, in defibrillator studies, when they talk low energy defibrillators they often mean 150j not 67-81.

              Are there published studies into cell AED like there are for heartsine and zoll

              Cell AED can cost more $399 monthly plus $198 a year subscription program adds up to $1983 over 8 years provided subscription price stays the same. That's more than a heartsine 360p costs to buy.

              I love what Cell-AED is doing, trying to make an affordable defibrillator, i just don't feel.its there yet. Maybe in a few generations time.

              • @cheapjack:

                It's not a blatant lie that higher energy defibs can save more lives.

                What you have linked is not showing any strong evidence that higher energy saves lives. The survival rates were roughly the same in first-shock conversions. It is showing that in the tiny subset of patients who required multiple shocks, there was a slightly higher increase in survival when higher shock energies were used. But it does not indicate what type of VFs were experienced by patients in the lower energy group. They also didn't give a basic patient profile of their participants and their medical histories.

                The study also does not prove that higher energies are the direct result of conversion. It could be they had more VF rhythms that responded well to defibrillation.
                I tell you again, stop lying to the general public if you are not a trained scientist.

                The study is also funded by Medtronic. I'll wait for a more impartial study.

                • @Hydralyte: Hey hydralate.

                  Where are the cell AED studies?
                  The only study I've found underway has not published results yet. Where are the studies showing 67j-81 is equivalent or better than 200j in an AED.

                  As opposed to the studies proving the efficacy of zoll, heartsine and lifepak.

                  Also charging time and time to shock is shorter on many other AED models. Time counts in am emergency.

                  Anyway, you are a person of strong conviction! Which is cool. :-) I'm definitely no shill, I love defibs and think they are amazing tools. We could keep this reply thread going for days, but I think we should end our conversation here.

  • -1

    I'm surprised nobody has pointed out the derp face on the front

    • It looks cool as! Like a 1980s Roboto…..

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