Most product pages get written once and never updated. We track every change to ours, so you know what you're citing.
Equipment specs go stale. A flow rate changes with a firmware update. A chamber dimension gets corrected after production feedback. The product page stays the same.
So we started tracking changes.
Every product in our catalog has a spec history. When a specification changes, the version increments and the change is logged: what changed, when, and why. You can see the full history on any product page by clicking the Continuously Verified badge.
Specs are checked against current production regularly — not uploaded once and left alone.
Every update is recorded with a date and reason. Nothing changes silently.
The full spec version log is visible on every product page. No hidden changes.
Reference a specific spec version in your paper so reviewers can verify exactly what you used.
If you reference our equipment in a methods section, the spec history lets you and anyone replicating your work see exactly what the specifications were when you purchased. If something changed since then, the log shows when and what.
A researcher orders a syringe pump and builds a microinjection protocol around the listed minimum flow rate. She publishes the protocol. A year later, a second lab tries to replicate — but a firmware update three months ago shifted the minimum flow rate. The product page never changed.
With a spec history, the second lab can see when the specification changed and adjust. Without one, they’re troubleshooting a discrepancy that has nothing to do with their technique.
Here’s what a product’s spec history looks like. This is from a real product in our catalog.
We track spec changes because your experiments depend on those numbers being right.
Browse our catalog and click any Continuously Verified badge to see the full spec history.



