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LangtonTools

Tool · Industry intersection

Loupe for fluid power

DOM capture and AI prompt generator, applied to fluid power & hydraulics.

Evaluating a landing page for conversion fit usually requires screenshots, a description, and a 15-minute back-and-forth with an AI about what you see. Loupe captures the full DOM of any page and structures it, then generates an AI-ready prompt you can paste into Claude or ChatGPT for a structured page critique. For fluid power landing pages, this matters because the key elements (spec sheets, pressure ratings, ISO certifications, cross-reference tools, stock status) can be buried or missing, and you need a structured audit to identify the issues. Loupe's DOM capture includes all text content, hierarchy, and button/form structure — so when you paste the resulting prompt into Claude, it can see exactly where the 'ISO 4406' callout is (or is not), whether the 'pressure rating' is prominent, whether 'in stock today' is visible above fold. The structured prompt generation saves the 'let me describe what I see' step. The copy-to-clipboard workflow means you paste the prompt directly into your AI of choice and get a structured page critique immediately. The local-only execution (no third-party calls without your action) is important for sensitive account information. Recommendation: use Loupe on all new landing pages before they go live. Pair with PageTag's classification (so the AI knows whether it is evaluating a CLP, PLP, or PDP). Generate the Loupe prompt, paste into Claude with your brief 'this page targets [OEM design engineers / MRO maintenance buyers] — what is missing from the copy and layout?', and iterate on the web team's response.

About Loupe

One click on any landing page captures its DOM, structures it, and produces an AI-ready prompt you can paste into Claude or ChatGPT for a structured page critique. Replaces the screenshot-and-describe workflow that loses every nuance the AI could actually use.

Full Loupe page →

About fluid power

Fluid power buyers split into two distinct tracks: OEM design engineers selecting components for new equipment, and MRO maintenance buyers replacing failed parts. Both speak in part numbers, pressure ratings, and ISO standards — but they convert on entirely different campaigns.

Full fluid power playbook →