HTMwire
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Gossen Metrawatt

Electrical Safety Analyzers

HTMwire assessment

Gossen Metrawatt (GMC) is a Nuremberg, Germany electrical test-and-measurement manufacturer founded in 1906. Its SECULIFE ST series provides electrical safety analysis, patient simulation, and NIBP testing for medical devices. The company is the parent of biomedical test brands Rigel Medical and Seaward.

Key Features

  • SECULIFE ST series electrical safety analyzers
  • Patient simulation and NIBP testing
  • Medical-device electrical safety testing

What Sets Them Apart

Century-old German test-and-measurement maker whose SECULIFE ST analyzers cover electrical safety, patient simulation, and NIBP; parent of Rigel Medical and Seaward.

How Gossen Metrawatt Uses AI

No AI/ML

HTMwire's independent read on the technology — not the vendor's marketing claim.

Key Numbers

  • Founded 1906
  • 500+ employees

Tags

electrical-safety-analyzer patient-simulator nibp iec-62353 germany

Frequently Asked Questions

What does Gossen Metrawatt's test equipment measure?

Gossen Metrawatt's SECULIFE ST series performs electrical safety analysis, patient simulation, and NIBP (non-invasive blood pressure) testing for medical devices. The Nuremberg, Germany manufacturer, founded in 1906, makes these analyzers for biomed and HTM electrical safety testing across facility sizes.

Who owns Gossen Metrawatt?

Gossen Metrawatt (GMC) is the parent of the biomedical test brands Rigel Medical and Seaward. It is a century-old German test-and-measurement manufacturer based in Nuremberg, founded in 1906, with 500+ employees.

Where is Gossen Metrawatt based?

Gossen Metrawatt is based in Nuremberg, Germany. Founded in 1906, the electrical test-and-measurement maker has 500+ employees and produces the SECULIFE ST series of medical electrical safety analyzers.

Does Gossen Metrawatt use AI?

No. Gossen Metrawatt is a hardware test-and-measurement manufacturer, and its SECULIFE ST analyzers have no AI component. They focus on electrical safety analysis, patient simulation, and NIBP testing for medical devices.

Sources

  1. Gossen Metrawatt

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Last updated: June 7, 2026