One of the most overlooked risks in a dental practice acquisition is deferred maintenance. It’s easy to focus on production, collections, EBITDA, and patient flow during diligence. But if the physical dental office , equipment, technology, and infrastructure have been underinvested in for years, those hidden costs can dramatically affect performance after closing. Deferred maintenance shows up in many ways: • Aging compressors and vacuum systems • Outdated electrical and plumbing infrastructure • Worn chairs and delivery units • Failing HVAC systems • Poor IT and network systems • Roof, flooring, cabinetry, and plumbing issues • Neglected sterilization and operatory workflows On paper, a practice may appear profitable. But if the buyer has to immediately spend hundreds of thousands of dollars post-close just to stabilize operations, that “great deal” can quickly become a major drag on cash flow and growth. Even more importantly, deferred maintenance impacts the patient and dental team...
A buck-boost transformer is a small electrical transformer used to slightly increase (“boost”) or decrease (“buck”) incoming voltage to match what equipment actually needs. For example: If your building is supplying 208 volts but your equipment performs best at 230–240 volts , a buck-booster can raise the voltage. If voltage is too high, it can reduce it slightly to protect equipment. In dental offices , these are increasingly being recommended for: vacuum systems, air compressors, sterilization equipment, imaging equipment, and other high-load mechanical systems. Why Dental Equipment Suppliers Are Recommending Them More Often 1. Modern Dental Equipment Is More Sensitive Older compressors and vacuums were often more forgiving mechanically. Newer systems: use variable frequency drives (VFDs), electronic control boards, digital monitoring, soft-start motors, and energy-efficient motors that require tighter voltage tolerances. Even being 5–10%...