@qotca@stux I might have gotten it wrong. I did some searching TM and there are some very similar looking MRI machines but also CT machines. Apparently with the modern MRIs the non-superconductive coils are nowhere near as visible as they were with the really old ones.
So I'm not sure anymore ^^'
@stux@qotca one pointer could be that it does not have a helium vent pipe but I heard that modern ones recover almost all of the helium in case of a quench so this also isn't a reliable way to tell
@stux@qotca also *many* results on google image search seem to be wrong. most results for "MRI without cover" that have visible part numbers are CT scanners...
@stux@qotca Ah. Should've thought a bit more about it... MRIs should not need to rotate (they don't have a reason to due to their completely different working principle as far as I know) so this most likely is a CT scanner
@qotca@stux@jakob after 20 years servicing CTs (and occasionally some MRI) y can promise you there isn’t a rotating part in an MRI. The sound you hear is just the vibration of the coils due to the magnetic field.
@qotca@stux I've seen one MRI in person doing it's thing and had multiple CT scans done.
The MRI did not spin or had any obvious clues to being spinny (like an audible spinup/spindown phase) while the CT had very obviously a rotating part inside
@jakob @stux
Ty