Skip to main content

Jenoptik and Vysionics together for the first time at Traffex

Jenoptik will present its complete product range for modern traffic monitoring Traffex 2015, together with solutions from its UK subsidiary, Vysionics. The SmartCamera IV is combined with a laser scanner or radar sensor in a compact module which can easily be integrated to address a variety of user needs. For mobile use, it can be mounted in a car or, by utilising the TraffiTop housing, on a tripod or on the container TraffiBase. For stationary use, the module is integrated into the TraffiTower 2.0,
April 8, 2015 Read time: 2 mins
79 Jenoptik will present its complete product range for modern traffic monitoring 136 Traffex 2015, together with solutions from its UK subsidiary, 604 Vysionics.

The SmartCamera IV is combined with a laser scanner or radar sensor in a compact module which can easily be integrated to address a variety of user needs.

For mobile use, it can be mounted in a car or, by utilising the TraffiTop housing, on a tripod or on the container TraffiBase. For stationary use, the module is integrated into the TraffiTower 2.0, or installed in the new TraffiCompact housing that is on show at Traffex for the first time.

Jenoptik’s new pole-mounted TraffiCompact housing offers easy access to all components, displays and lenses while the open hood serves as rain protection.

Vysionics will be showing a wide range of ANPR based technologies, including SPECS3 Vector, the very latest average speed solution, VECTOR, the highly successful integrated ANPR camera unit, and Vortex, a complete parking and access control suite of cameras and software.  Vysionics will be also showcasing its experience in average speed enforcement in temporary roadworks and route management schemes.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Machine vision offers new solutions to old problems
    October 28, 2014
    The transportation sector is set to benefit from a far wider range of machine vision technology. While machine vision techniques have been applied to traffic management applications for some years, in some areas there can still be a shortage of knowledge about what the technology can offer transportation professionals. The image processing and interpretation functions of machine vision enables control room staff to be immediately alerted to occurrences requiring attention which, in turn, enables each person
  • Siemens at Traffex 2015
    April 21, 2015
    As Traffex 2015 event partner, Siemens will be exhibiting products from across its extensive range, from innovative traffic controllers, signals and detection solutions, to the very latest traffic management, electric vehicle charging and traffic enforcement systems. Siemens new Service Operations Centre, which is being launched at Traffex, is a dedicated traffic management and support service which brings together the company’s existing Field Service Contact Centre, Systems Support and its Poole-based C
  • The benefits of combining enforcement and traffic management
    February 27, 2013
    Jason Barnes considers how combining enforcement equipment with other traffic management technologies might benefit our future – if only the will were really in place to do so. During the ITS World Congress in Vienna in October last year, Navtech Radar and Vysion­ics ITS announced a strategic partnership that would combine the expertise of Navtech in millimetre-wave wide-area surveillance technology with Vysionics’ machine vision-based automatic number plate recognition (ANPR) and average speed measurement
  • Machine vision takes ITS further than the eye can see
    January 5, 2016
    Vitronic’s John Yalda looks at how machine vision has become an integral part of many ITS deployments and why it complements, rather than replaces, ANPR. New and conventional business concepts like online shopping and mail order business are becoming more established in the cultures of fast-growing economies and increasing the demand for flexibility in the freight transportation and logistics industry. Road transport has become the preferred infrastructure for freight forwarding and several studies predict