Buyer's Desk
16 vs 64 vs 128 Slice CT Scanner: Which Is Right for Your Facility?
April 5, 2026 · 6 min · Medical Imaging Specialists

Practical considerations, risk points, and what to ask before you buy, service, move, or maintain imaging equipment.
Target Keyword Phrase: how many slices do I need in a CT scanner
When shopping for a CT scanner — new or refurbished — one of the first specs you’ll encounter is slice count. 16-slice. 64-slice. 128-slice. 256-slice. The numbers get thrown around like they’re the whole story, but they’re not.
Slice count matters, but the right slice count depends entirely on what your facility is actually doing. A community urgent care clinic has completely different needs than a cardiac imaging center. Buying more slices than you need wastes capital. Buying too few puts you behind on clinical capability and patient throughput.
This guide breaks it down.
What Does “Slice Count” Actually Mean?
A CT scanner’s slice count refers to how many rows of detector elements fire simultaneously during each rotation of the X-ray tube. A 64-slice scanner captures 64 parallel image slices per rotation. A 128-slice captures 128.
More slices means:
- Faster scan times — less time per acquisition pass
- Thinner slice thickness — higher spatial resolution
- Better temporal resolution — critical for moving structures like the heart
- Less motion artifact — important for pediatric, trauma, and cardiac patients
But more slices also means a higher purchase price, higher service costs, and in some cases, a steeper learning curve for your techs.
16-Slice CT Scanners: The Workhorse for General Imaging
A 16-slice CT scanner is not a relic — it’s still a capable system for a wide range of routine clinical applications. Many community hospitals, urgent care centers, and outpatient clinics run high patient volumes on 16-slice systems without complaint.
Best suited for:
- General body imaging (chest, abdomen, pelvis)
- Head/brain studies
- Extremity imaging
- Facilities with a lower scan volume (under 20 studies/day)
What it won’t do well:
- Cardiac CT angiography (CTA) — slice speed and rotation time aren’t fast enough
- High-resolution pulmonary studies requiring very thin slices
- Trauma centers with high throughput demands
Refurbished price range: $40,000–$100,000 depending on OEM, vintage, and reconditioning level.
A refurbished GE LightSpeed 16 or Siemens Sensation 16, properly reconditioned with a tube warranty, delivers solid clinical value for the right setting at a fraction of new cost.
32-Slice CT Scanners: The Middle Ground
The 32-slice category is a bit of a bridge — you see it less often than 16 or 64, but it offers a meaningful performance step up without the premium of a true 64-slice system.
Best suited for:
- Mid-volume outpatient imaging centers
- Facilities that want better resolution than a 16-slice without cardiac capability demands
- Budget-conscious buyers who still want sub-millimeter slice thickness
Refurbished price range: $70,000–$150,000
If you’re evaluating a refurbished Philips Brilliance 32 or Siemens Sensation 32, these can be a smart buy — especially for facilities where the used 64-slice systems in their budget have high hours on the tube.
64-Slice CT Scanners: The Clinical Sweet Spot
The 64-slice CT scanner is where the market really opens up. This is the workhorse of modern imaging departments worldwide, and it’s the minimum recommended configuration for cardiac CT angiography.
Best suited for:
- Hospital radiology departments
- Cardiovascular imaging centers
- Multi-specialty imaging centers
- Busy outpatient facilities (30+ studies/day)
- Facilities that need cardiac capability
Key clinical advantages over 16-slice:
- Full cardiac CTA capability with ECG gating
- Faster scan times reduce breath-hold requirements
- Thin-slice isotropic datasets for 3D/MPR reconstructions
- Better pediatric imaging due to reduced scan duration
Refurbished price range: $120,000–$300,000 depending on OEM, vintage, and reconditioning scope.
Top-tier refurbished options include the GE LightSpeed VCT 64, Siemens SOMATOM Sensation 64, and Philips Brilliance 64. These are proven platforms with robust parts availability and deep service knowledge in the field.
128-Slice and Beyond: When Does It Make Sense?
128-slice (and higher) systems — including dual-source configurations like the Siemens SOMATOM Definition Flash — represent the premium tier of CT performance. They deliver exceptional temporal resolution, sub-millimeter slice thickness at very fast rotation speeds, and advanced cardiac and spectral imaging capability.
Best suited for:
- Dedicated cardiac CT programs
- Academic medical centers
- High-volume trauma centers
- Facilities positioning themselves as regional imaging leaders
When it’s overkill:
- General community imaging without a defined cardiac CT program
- Lower-volume outpatient centers
- Facilities that don’t have the staff to interpret advanced cardiac datasets
Refurbished price range: $250,000–$600,000+
The premium is real — but so is the capability gap. If you’re building a cardiac CT program or competing for complex referrals, a refurbished 128-slice or dual-source system can be a competitive differentiator at well below new equipment pricing.
Slice Count vs. Other Specs: Don’t Make It the Only Number
Slice count is important, but it’s one variable among many. When evaluating a refurbished CT scanner, also consider:
- Tube hours — A high-slice system with a nearly-exhausted X-ray tube is a liability. Always ask for tube hours and request a tube warranty.
- Software version and upgrade path — Older software can limit your clinical protocols even on capable hardware.
- Rotation speed — Critical for cardiac imaging; look at gantry rotation time (ideally ≤ 0.5 seconds for cardiac work).
- Detector configuration — Some “64-slice” scanners achieve that number through interpolation, not true 64 detector rows. Know what you’re buying.
- Service support — Can the vendor support this system locally? What’s the parts availability outlook for this platform?
- OEM and vintage — GE, Siemens, and Philips all have different parts ecosystems and service support models. Some vintage years are better supported than others.
Matching Slice Count to Clinical Need: A Quick Reference
| Use Case | Recommended Minimum |
|---|---|
| General outpatient imaging (low-mid volume) | 16-slice |
| Urgent care / emergency imaging | 16–32-slice |
| Hospital radiology (general) | 64-slice |
| Cardiac CT angiography | 64-slice minimum |
| Dedicated cardiovascular imaging | 128-slice or dual-source |
| Trauma center / high throughput | 64–128-slice |
| Academic / complex research imaging | 128-slice+ |
How Medical Imaging Specialists Can Help
At Medical Imaging Specialists, we’ve been sourcing, refurbishing, and installing CT scanners since 2004. We work with facilities across the United States, the Caribbean, and Latin America — from community clinics to hospital systems — and we understand that the right scanner for your facility isn’t always the most expensive one on the market.
Our team can help you match your clinical protocols and patient volume to the right slice count, OEM platform, and budget. We carry inventory across 16, 32, 64, and 128-slice systems from GE, Siemens, and Philips, and we back our systems with in-house engineers, parts inventory, and service support.
If you’re evaluating CT options and want a straight answer from people who know these machines, contact Medical Imaging Specialists — we’re happy to talk through your situation without the sales pressure.
Medical Imaging Specialists is a family-owned medical imaging equipment company based in Bradenton, Florida. Founded in 2004, MIS buys, refurbishes, and resells CT, PET/CT, and MRI systems and provides full-service support, parts, and service contracts to clients in the US, Caribbean, and LATAM.
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