The phrase "equip with knowledge" is correct and usable in written English. You could use it to describe someone becoming educated on a certain topic. For example, "John has been working hard to equip himself with knowledge about business finance.".
But the relatively easy access to USG these days, its non-invasiveness, and the availability of personnel such as anesthesiologists who are equipped with knowledge and expertise required to operate and interpret such equipment extend the utilities of such machines.
Instead, large chemical and pharmaceutical companies began to appear and employed university-trained scientists equipped with knowledge of the latest technologies and information in their fields.
You're looking for people who don't just regurgitate what they have seen on the homepage of your website, but rather come equipped with knowledge about the work you have done in the past and reasons as to why this interests them.
The technical obstacles remain formidable: we don't know enough about how the brain's language areas work, or how to integrate foreign tissue into them, or how to "program" them so that, for example, a neurolinguistic transplant came equipped with knowledge of English rather than factory fresh (like a newborn), without a language installed.
The architect should be equipped with knowledge of many branches of study and varied kinds of learning.
This means that instructors should be equipped with knowledge and experience, and be aware of providing guidance to students as regards the proper way of playing games.
These software agents are equipped with knowledge and beliefs and interact with each other according to protocols governed by a set of logical rules.
Ludwig does not simply clarify my doubts with English writing, it enlightens my writing with new possibilities
Simone Ivan Conte
Software Engineer at Adobe, UK