About Sanda Corporation
SANDA
Corporation began in 1970, as SANDA Incorporated, an exporter/importer of
instruments with applications in analytical chemistry. In 1978, SANDA
closed the export/import business, in favor of manufacturing its' own analytical
instruments. And in 1984, SANDA became the first company to offer a
computerized analytical instrument.
Since then, SANDA
has developed, marketed and sold a fine line of instruments dedicated to the
analyses of chemical reactions. In December of 1990, SANDA Incorporated was
renamed and capitalized as SANDA Corporation.
The basic business has
remained the same since 1990, and operates out of Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.
Sanda's main product line consists of titrators, namely the F.A.C.T.S. CE2010
Multi-Titrator, which is capable of performing pH, Thermometric, Optical and
Conductometric Titrations. Titration, a common analytical technique, is defined
as:
"the process
or method of determining the concentration of a substance in solutions by adding
to it a standard reagent of known concentration in carefully measured amounts
until a reaction of definite and known proportion is completed, as shown by a
color change or by electrical measurement, and then calculating the unknown
concentration."
With the introduction of
Windows '95 into the marketplace, SANDA began working to upgrade our titration
program out of the DOS environment, and into the Windows environment. SANDA
successfully accomplished this goal by building the new program based on the
National Instrument software and hardware design. And in early 1998, SANDA
unleashed the very versatile SandaWin Titration Program. The
introduction of SandaWin into the market was flawless, and immediately gained
great appreciation by both older users, who updated from DOS, to newer users,
who finally found the system to do the job.
SANDA has always been on
the forefront of Titration design and manufacturing, and the latest
model, the CE2010 is sure to just as successful as the previous models.