I have one, don't know the name, given to me by a friend,
laboratory instrument that extracts liquid from a sample using a vacuum.
I quarter the fig, scrape the meat out, leaving the skin behind.
Sample is placed in the unit, and liquid is extracted into a small plastic cylinder.
Before I had this unit,
I would quarter and scrape the figs,
then use metal micron mesh filters,
massage the pulp through the filters,
then I would leave the sieved pulp sitting on
the finest micro screen placed on top of the electronic brix meter,
within a few minutes, it would produce liquid.
From my testing,
average is 10-16 brix
good is 18-24
once you get above 25 its special.
Generally people that consider a 16 brix fig as "really good"
most likely have never tasted a higher brix variety.
Human taste is also effected by current emotional state,
surroundings, temperature and many other factors.