 
    If there is one word that epitomises the current trend in enforcement technology then that word is consolidation: multi-function cameras, miniaturisation and combining radar and visual detection methods.
One example is Turkish company
Indeed the company has reduced the size and weight of its speed enforcement system to such an extent that the unit, which can detect vehicles travelling at up to 200km/h and incorporates ANPR, can be mounted on a bicycle – the Smart Patrol Bike to be precise. Based on the Company’s mobile 360° surveillance Smart Patrol technology, the system has been developed for use on bicycles and as is an integrated solution that connects and communicates with all units controlled in the ‘Smart Centre’.
According to Ekin, police departments around the world rely on bicycles as one of the most versatile tools in law enforcement, emergency medical response and security. The Smart Patrol Bike operates on moving or parked vehicles, people and objects, requires no infrastructural investment and enables law enforcement units to perform surveillance tasks in areas motor vehicles find difficult to reach because of congestion or other restrictions.
In a 45-minute trial around the congested part of Istanbul near the Bosphorus, the Smart Patrol Bike captured and read the number plates of 99 parked and 257 moving vehicles.
A different tack is being employed by
CiTE can be paired with either the radar-based stationary Stalker Phodar SE-2 (which has video and high-resolution still capture) or the laser-based and hand-held Stalker LidarCam.
The recently released the Phodar SE-2, a dual-camera photo-radar speed enforcement system capturing 24-megapixel still images and HD video evidence. LidarCam combines Stalker’s X-Series LIDAR with a high-resolution digital camera and can perform stand-alone roadside ticketing or complete citation processing through the CiTE S3ystem.
The  latest version of Truevelo’s D-Cam system uses scanning radar as a  trigger rather than in-road piezo electric sensors. Not only does the  radar, which is built into the camera housing, mean there is no need to  cut the road surface, it can also track 256 objects simultaneously to  determine category, speed and position. 
 
The  enhanced detection means the system can simultaneously determine the  vehicles’ category and apply the appropriate speed limits to each. As  with previous incarnations, Truevelo uses three lines painted on the  road to provide secondary verification of the vehicle’s speed. 
 
“If  the vehicle’s front axle is over the centre line it is travelling at  the posed limit,” says John Harris, business development director with  
 
The new Halo camera enforcement system from 
 
It  is based on a high definition radar tracking system that can detect and  track the front or rear of each vehicle passing the system in either  approaching or receding traffic for a range of up to 320m. 
 
The  data feeds into a decision making module which can be programmed to  detect multiple offences including tailgating, junction blocking, mobile  phone use and illegal U-turn as well as red-light running, spot and  average speed detection, bus lane use and wrong-way driving.
 
According  to Alex Jannink who heads Redflex’s Future Product Group, not only does  Halo provide a single-pole solution, it also has automated secondary  speed measurement for all speed offences using an independent optical  measurement system.  
Its hybrid imaging system  combines visible and non-visible illumination (that can cover up to six  lanes) on an offence-by-offence basis. For instance, using visible flash  for red-light offences where a visual deterrent is desired, and  infrared for average speed violations.
 
Another  standard feature is the option to activate ANPR for all passing   vehicles in conjunction with any enforcement combination, including   vehicle hotlists.
 
Finnish   sensor manufacturer 
 
 
 
This   data enables road authorities and integrators to assess in real time   the flow of approaching and receding traffic in any given detection zone   to enhances traffic management, incident and queue detection, speed   enforcement, banned turns, wrong lane and red light violations.
 
In   addition, the device is compatible with the company’s new   communications platform and data gathering server service as well as   with other intelligent detection systems.
 
 At   the end of last year 
 
According    to the company, at a recent demonstration for a police force in the    Middle East the system detected 73 violations in less than five minutes  –   the fines from which would repay the cost of the unit.   
 
The    on-site set-up time is less than five minutes, operation is said to  be   straight forward and the use of post-capture ANPR simplifies the   process  allowing several violations a second to be captured.  As there   may be  several vehicles in the same picture, the violator is  identified  with  lane information and speed and the captured data is  encrypted to  Triple  DES or AES12 standards. When operating  autonomously the battery  life is  12 hours and the system can be  specified with visible or  infra-red  illumination.
     
Polish  company 
 
Finally,   Lector  Vision has developed a pair of sun glasses with built-in   automatic  number plate recognition. The glasses have an onboard camera,   GPS, a CPU  (with software to allow plate recognition to be executed   inside the  glasses) and a Wi-Fi link to a smartphone to export data to   Lector  Vision's remote Traffic Command Centre.
 
The    company produces a traditional ANPR camera called Traffic Eye that    integrates the camera, control electronics, illumination, image    processing and control in a single device. 
 
     
         
         
        



