Moog Infinity vs Kangaroo, Sentinel, and Infinity Orange Feeding Pumps

The Moog Infinity is often compared with Kangaroo Joey, Kangaroo Connect, Kangaroo Omni, Amsino Sentinel, and Moog Infinity Orange because all of them fall within the enteral feeding pump category. Even so, they do not represent the same kind of pump. Some are built around lighter mobile use and any-orientation operation, some add feed-and-flush capability, some expand into more complex system features, and one is a small-volume Infinity variant rather than a direct standard-volume competitor. The standard Infinity is most closely associated with mobile use, any-orientation operation, ±5% accuracy, and no annual maintenance or calibration.

Joey, Connect, Omni, and Sentinel sit outside the Infinity family and serve as broader market comparisons. Infinity Orange stays within the Infinity family, but shifts toward small-volume feeding with a lower flow-rate ceiling and much lower priming and residual volumes while keeping the same small footprint and 24-hour battery profile as the standard Infinity.

 

 

Model Core Positioning Published Size And Weight Battery Feed / Flush Features Mobility / Orientation Difference Maintenance / Technical Difference

Moog Infinity

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Standard-volume mobile enteral pump 4.05 in. H x 5.65 in. W x 1.95 in. D; 14.4 oz. 24 hours at 125 mL/hr Feed only Any orientation ±5% accuracy; no annual maintenance or calibration

Kangaroo Joey

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Portable feed-and-flush pump 1.7 lbs.; 2.3 lbs. with pole clamp 18 hours Feed and flush Portable, but not positioned around any-orientation use 72-hour history feature

Kangaroo Connect

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Connected enteral pump from hospital to home 3.9 in. H x 6.1 in. W x 1.6 in. D; 0.73 lb. without pole clamp Rechargeable battery noted in operator manual Feed and flush system positioning Portability framed around continuity from hospital to home Wireless connectivity is the main differentiator

Kangaroo Omni

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Feed-and-flush enteral pump Portable pump platform with feed-and-flush positioning Rechargeable battery platform Feed and flush Portable, but not positioned around any-orientation use Broader system comparison than Infinity’s feed-only design

Amsino Sentinel

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Larger enteral feeding pump with pole clamp mobility 9.06 in. W x 7.48 in. H x 5.12 in. D; 5.4 lbs. Approx. 6 hours at 125 mL/hr Feed only Built-in pole clamp allows movement, but not in the same mobile class as Infinity ±10% accuracy with AMSure sets

 

Infinity Vs. Infinity Orange

Once flush capability is added, Joey, Connect, and Omni move into a different workflow category than Infinity. Infinity Orange is a small-volume Infinity variant. It keeps the same 4.05 x 5.65 x 1.95 inch footprint, 14.4 oz. weight, 24-hour battery at 125 mL/hr, and any-orientation operation as the standard Infinity, but lowers the flow-rate range to 0.1 to 300 mL/hr and reduces priming volume to about 5.5 mL and residual volume to about 2.0 mL. Standard Infinity runs from 0.1 to 600 mL/hr, with priming volume around 15.0 mL and residual volume around 11.5 mL.

Model Flow Rate Range Priming Volume Residual Volume Orientation Battery
Moog Infinity 0.1 to 600 mL/hr ~15.0 mL ~11.5 mL Any 24 hours at 125 mL/hr
Moog Infinity Orange 0.1 to 300 mL/hr ~5.5 mL ~2.0 mL Any 24 hours at 125 mL/hr

 

How Infinity Differs From Joey In Daily Use

Infinity and Kangaroo Joey are often treated as the closest comparison because both are portable enteral pumps used in home settings. Infinity stays centered on lighter mobile use and feed-only operation, while Joey adds feed-and-flush capability and a heavier overall setup.

Infinity vs. Joey at a glance

  • Infinity: lighter mobile use, any-orientation operation, feed-only setup
  • Joey: feed-and-flush system, heavier setup, 72-hour history feature
  • Main difference: mobility-first design versus feed-and-flush workflow

In daily use, Infinity is more closely tied to lighter carry use and movement, while Joey is more often discussed in relation to flushing capability and broader system setup.

 

How Infinity Differs From Connect And Omni

Kangaroo Connect and Kangaroo Omni move the comparison beyond a simple portable-pump discussion. Connect adds a connected-device angle. Omni adds feed-and-flush capability and a broader workflow comparison against Infinity’s feed-only design.

Pump What Changes Why It Matters
Infinity Mobility-first, any-orientation, lower-maintenance design Keeps the focus on lighter daily use and simpler feeding workflow
Kangaroo Connect Wireless connectivity and hospital-to-home positioning Adds a connected-device layer that Infinity does not emphasize
Kangaroo Omni Feed-and-flush capability and broader system workflow Shifts the comparison toward a more feature-expanded feeding setup

 

How Sentinel Changes The Comparison

Amsino Sentinel changes the comparison because it sits in a clearly different physical and battery class. It is larger, heavier, and more tied to pole-clamp movement than to the lighter mobile style associated with Infinity.

What stands out about Sentinel

  • Larger and heavier than Infinity
  • Shorter battery life
  • More tied to pole-clamp movement
  • Less centered on lightweight ambulatory use

Sentinel sits outside the compact portable segment and shows how much larger and heavier an enteral pump can become while still remaining mobile in a limited sense.

 

What The Flush Feature Changes

Infinity is a feed-only pump. Joey, Connect, and Omni support feed-and-flush operation. That difference changes setup, supplies, and daily workflow because flushing becomes part of the pump system instead of a separate step.

Pump Type Feeding Style Effect On Routine
Infinity Feed only Simpler feeding workflow
Joey, Connect, Omni Feed and flush More involved workflow and broader system function

That is why Infinity should not be framed as a direct one-to-one match for every Kangaroo model. Once flush capability is added, the comparison moves away from simple mobility and into a broader workflow discussion.

 

What Portability Means Across These Pumps

Portability does not mean the same thing across all of these pumps. Infinity ties portability to a very small footprint, low weight, 24-hour battery life at 125 mL/hr, and any-orientation use. Joey and Omni remain portable, but with more feature complexity. Sentinel is more limited by size, weight, and shorter battery life. Infinity Orange stays close to standard Infinity in footprint, weight, battery, and orientation.

Portable does not mean the same thing here

  • Infinity: very small, light, and any-orientation
  • Joey and Omni: portable, but more feature-loaded
  • Sentinel: movable, but not in the same lightweight class
  • Infinity Orange: same mobility platform as standard Infinity

“Portable enteral pump” does not describe a single design style. These pumps vary in weight, battery life, mobility, and overall setup.

 

What Infinity Orange Changes Within The Infinity Family

Infinity Orange shows how Moog adapted the same mobility platform for a different feeding range. Standard Infinity remains the broader standard-volume model. Infinity Orange narrows the flow range and reduces priming and residual volume for smaller-volume use.

Shared Features What Orange Changes
Same size, same weight, same battery profile, same any-orientation design Lower flow ceiling, lower priming volume, lower residual volume

Infinity Orange is part of the Infinity family, not a direct equivalent to Joey, Omni, or Sentinel. The main differences are the lower flow ceiling, lower priming volume, and lower residual volume.

 

Final Takeaway

Moog Infinity is most closely associated with mobile use, any-orientation operation, ±5% accuracy, and a lower-maintenance design. Joey, Connect, and Omni add feed-and-flush capability and broader system features. Sentinel represents a larger and heavier pump class. Infinity Orange stays within the Infinity family but shifts toward small-volume feeding with lower priming and residual volumes.

These pumps all fall within enteral feeding, but they do not represent the same kind of daily-use design, feature set, or mobility profile.

Key takeaway

  • Infinity: mobility, any-orientation use, lower-maintenance positioning
  • Joey, Connect, and Omni: flush capability and broader system features
  • Sentinel: larger and heavier pump class
  • Infinity Orange: small-volume Infinity variant

Quick update: ePump references were replaced with Omni throughout the intro, jump links, table row, section header, comparison copy, flush section, portability section, and takeaway. Nothing else was changed.