Last updated: 8 Jun 2026 | 20 Views |
Everything a government procurement officer needs — from drafting the scope of work and technical specs to avoiding bid protests.
Wanphen, a senior procurement officer at a sub-district municipality in central Thailand, recalls with audible fatigue how last year her municipality secured budget approval to buy three disease-control mist sprayers for the annual dengue-prevention mission. The project was delayed by nearly four months because the terms of reference were written so broadly that one bidder filed a protest claiming the specs favoured a particular brand.
The committee was forced to cancel the first round, rewrite the entire technical specification, and restart the e-bidding process. By the time the equipment actually arrived, the rainy season — the peak of Aedes mosquito activity — had already passed. Local dengue cases rose, and the local executive faced pointed questions in the council chamber about why disease prevention had fallen behind schedule.
Wanphen's case is not an isolated one. It reflects a problem that recurs across local administrative organisations nationwide. Procuring disease-control equipment looks like routine paperwork, but it is full of legal and technical pitfalls. A single slip can send the whole project back to square one. This article gathers practical guidance for writing a tight, compliant TOR that delivers equipment which actually works in the field.
The heart of Thailand's public procurement law (the Public Procurement and Supplies Administration Act B.E. 2560) is value for money, transparency, efficiency and accountability. Writing a technical specification therefore walks a fine line between being specific enough to secure quality equipment and being open enough to avoid accusations of spec-locking.
The difficulty is that a disease-control mist sprayer is a technical asset with many variables: engine system, droplet size, spray range, tank capacity, weight and durability. Procurement officers without a public-health or mechanical background often copy specs from an old project or from a single vendor's quotation — the very root of bid protests.
On the other side, a specification that is too loose — for example simply requesting a backpack mist sprayer without stating droplet size or engine standard — risks delivering cheap, low-quality equipment that breaks down after a few uses, becoming a dusty asset in storage and a maintenance burden in next year's budget.
Writing a good TOR is therefore not about copying a template. It is about understanding the agency's real mission, understanding the terrain, and translating those needs into technical attributes anchored to international standards — so the equipment fits the job and is free of controversy.
Local executives often treat disease-control equipment as a deferrable expense, but in reality the cost of not having ready tools far exceeds the price of the machine. When dengue or a communicable disease breaks out, a vector-control delay of just a few weeks can multiply the number of cases.
Put it in numbers. Treating a single hospitalised dengue patient can run into the tens of thousands of baht. If a sub-district sees dozens more cases because vector control came late, the public-health cost easily outstrips the investment in a quality sprayer from the outset — before counting the social cost and the erosion of public trust in the agency.
This is why writing a TOR that secures good equipment on time is the most worthwhile preventive investment. Shaving a little budget by buying a cheap, short-lived machine, or letting procurement drift, simply pushes the burden onto treatment budgets and citizens' safety in the end.
1. State the ULV system and droplet size clearly — Require droplets below 30 microns (VMD), the standard benchmark for ULV application, so disinfectant or insecticide stays suspended in the air longer and covers the area evenly. Stating this figure screens out thermal foggers and coarse sprayers unsuitable for indoor work.
2. Set engine and origin standards — Specify minimum engine power, ignition system and component quality — such as a Nikasil-coated cylinder and an international-standard carburettor — to obtain equipment durable under heavy continuous use, not a cheap assembly that wears out fast.
3. Specify spray range and air velocity — Public-area disease control needs adequate reach, e.g. no less than 10-12 metres, and high air velocity so droplets reach corners and elevated areas. Stating these figures secures equipment that performs in the field.
4. Balance tank capacity and weight — A chemical tank around 12 litres gives a long working cycle without frequent refills, but must balance against a weight an operator can carry all day. Stating an appropriate weight range protects both performance and operator safety.
5. Define warranty and spare-parts terms — A good TOR covers warranty, the presence of a domestic service centre and parts availability, because government assets must last years. A distributor that genuinely provides after-sales care is the guarantee of long-term value.
6. Require certificates and manuals — Require bidders to attach catalogues, standard certificates and a Thai-language manual so the acceptance committee has evidence the goods truly match the spec — not mere claims.
7. Set operator-safety criteria — Specify ergonomic design — padded straps, vibration damping and single-hand control — because staff carry the machine for hours. Operator safety and health is something a good TOR must weigh.
8. Require environmental friendliness — A ULV system that uses less chemical for the same coverage reduces residue in the environment and cuts consumable cost. This criterion aligns with the sustainability policies of public agencies.
9. Include operator-training terms — Good equipment comes with proper knowledge transfer. Require the vendor to train staff on use and basic maintenance so the machine performs to its potential and lasts longer.
10. Set measurable acceptance criteria — Define clear acceptance tests — a running test, a real spray-range measurement and a document check — so the acceptance committee has neutral, verifiable criteria that reduce later disputes.
A TOR that is perfect on paper can still fail if it ignores real operating conditions. Staff spraying in crowded communities, wet markets or flooded areas face heat, narrow paths and long shifts. A machine that is too heavy or hard to start becomes an obstacle immediately.
This is where the SOLO PORT 423 design shows its value. At just 11 kg dry, with a padded harness and four-point vibration damping, it reduces operator fatigue. The ergonomic single-hand lever makes spray volume and on/off control easy even over many continuous hours.
When a TOR accounts for these real-use dimensions — not just dry spec numbers — the agency gets equipment staff actually want to use, use to full effect, and keep for years. That is the true value-for-money of public funds.
Against the tight TOR elements above, the SOLO PORT 423 ULV backpack mist sprayer is a clear example of equipment designed to align with government standards. Made in Germany, it uses a 2-stroke engine rated 3 kW (4.1 hp), with a Nikasil-coated cylinder and a BING carburettor — international-grade components that guarantee durability.
On spray performance, it produces droplets below 30 microns to the ULV standard, reaches up to 12 metres, and pushes a maximum air velocity of 1,400 m³/h, covering wide areas and reaching difficult spots. The 12-litre chemical tank is made of translucent, UV-resistant material for a long working cycle, while the dry weight is just 11 kg.
These attributes not only let the SOLO PORT 423 pass the technical bars most TORs set, they let procurement officers write the specification with confidence, because every figure is backed by certifiable, verifiable documentation and supported by a domestic distributor ready for after-sales service.
| Model | SOLO PORT 423 |
| Engine | 2-stroke, single cylinder (Made in Germany) |
| Power | 3 kW / 4.1 hp |
| Displacement | 72.3 cc (Nikasil-coated) |
| Carburettor | BING float-type |
| Chemical tank | 12.0 L (translucent, UV-resistant) |
| Fuel tank | 1.4 L |
| Droplet size (VMD) | Below 30 microns (ULV) |
| Max spray reach | 12 metres |
| Max air velocity | 1,400 m³/h |
| Dry weight | 11.0 kg |
| Dimensions | 68 x 45 x 34 cm |
| Before: a loose TOR, exposed to protest | After: a tight TOR built on verifiable specs |
|---|---|
| ✗ Specs so broad that low-quality units win | ✓ Clearly states ULV below 30 microns |
| ✗ Bidders protest that the spec is locked | ✓ Uses international standards, favours no one |
| ✗ Project slips past the outbreak season | ✓ Procures in time for prevention season |
| ✗ Equipment fails fast, becomes a repair burden | ✓ Durable equipment lasting many years |
| ✗ Executives questioned in council | ✓ Clear, auditable prevention results |
“After we shifted to writing the TOR around technical attributes backed by documentation, the latest round went through with no protest, the equipment arrived before the rains, and — most importantly — even after a full year of heavy use the machine still runs smoothly with no niggling faults to send back for repair.”
— Senior procurement officer, a sub-district municipality
Can a TOR name a specific brand?
In principle, public procurement should not name brands. State verifiable technical attributes instead — droplet size, engine power, spray range — for transparency and open competition.
How much budget should be set per unit?
It depends on spec and quantity. Survey reference prices from several sources and obtain comparative quotations to set a reasonable, value-for-money median price under the regulations.
Does the SOLO PORT 423 come with documents for procurement?
Yes — catalogue, technical specifications and supporting documents are all available. Contact the World Health Disinfection team to obtain materials for median-price setting and acceptance.
The SOLO PORT 423 meets government TOR criteria and fits the procurement budgets of municipalities, sub-district administrations (SAO) and public-health agencies.
See the SOLO PORT 423 product & pricing »Call our team: 065-556-6294 | LINE: @whd268
World Health Disinfection Co., Ltd. — disease-control equipment specialists for government agencies
• SOLO PORT 423 ULV backpack mist sprayer
• World Health Disinfection — disease-control equipment hub
• Mosquito fogging & pest-control services for agencies
References: Department of Disease Control, MoPH Thailand · World Health Organization (WHO)
Procuring disease-control equipment is not mere paperwork — it is the first step that determines whether your agency can respond to an outbreak in time. A tightly written TOR, anchored in verifiable technical attributes, secures quality equipment that works and is free of controversy.
The SOLO PORT 423 is a fitting answer for municipalities, sub-district administrations and public-health agencies seeking a ULV mist sprayer that meets international standards, lasts, and is backed by a domestic distributor. To request information for median pricing and TOR preparation, contact the team today. #SOLOPORT423 #MunicipalProcurement