• Budget & ROI: These simulators are high cost—ensure your training volume, mission profile and users justify the investment.

  • Support & Consumables: Check availability of spare parts, consumables (blood reservoirs, wound modules), maintenance service, calibration and local support.

  • Training Infrastructure: You’ll need appropriate facility/space, power supply, storage, climate conditions and instructor operators who understand how to use the system fully.

  • Import & Logistics: Shipping, customs duties, local certification/import regulation must be accounted for; weight and size (especially for full‑body units) matter.

  • Scenario Customisation: The simulator should allow realistic and varying wound/trauma patterns to replicate your operational environment (e.g., tactical K9 units, urban search & rescue, etc.).

  • User‑Fit & Mission Alignment: Choose the model matching your mission profile—if you’re doing basic K9 medical first aid, full “DIESEL” level may be overkill; if you’re training for high‑risk military K9 trauma, advanced model is justified.

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