Skip to main content

Sensys speed cameras to be piloted in Asia

Sensys Traffic is to supply a customer in Asia with pilot speed enforcement systems to be trialled in an urban environment. The order, worth US$152,000, is for systems which have been designed with features adapted to the customer's unique environment and requirements and which will be tested prior to a decision on further investment. Sensys believes that the pilot systems will be delivered during summer 2014, with subsequent evaluation during the autumn. "This is the first order in accordance with
May 13, 2014 Read time: 1 min
569 Sensys Traffic is to supply a customer in Asia with pilot speed enforcement systems to be trialled in an urban environment.  

The order, worth US$152,000, is for systems which have been designed with features adapted to the customer's unique environment and requirements and which will be tested prior to a decision on further investment. Sensys believes that the pilot systems will be delivered during summer 2014, with subsequent evaluation during the autumn.

"This is the first order in accordance with our new market concept ‘design-function-precision’, where the customer has participated and influenced the design of the systems. We are looking forward very much to the results of the evaluation to be carried out in the autumn," says Johan Frilund, CEO of Sensys Traffic.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • What's next for transport communication systems?
    February 2, 2012
    Moxa Americas, Inc.'s Charles Chen ponders the way forward for transportation communications networks in the US
  • Transport Scotland opts for Vysionics average speed enforcement
    April 23, 2014
    Traffic control specialist Vysionics ITS has won a deal to deliver Europe’s longest average speed enforcement system. This will be installed on a 220km stretch of the A9 in Scotland. The installation will be the first time average speed cameras will have been used on such a long stretch of road on a permanent basis, rather than for short term use during road repairs. The current road configuration is a mixture of single and dual carriageway which carries a high proportion of HGV traffic. Part of the lon
  • Gatso to unveil visionary new platform
    June 19, 2012
    In February, ITS International learned that Gatso had just begun secret trials in the US of a new camera system. From a photograph, the radical modern new design of the cabinet suggested that the interior components were likely to have been upgraded. When Timo Gatsonides, managing director of the company, agreed to an exclusive interview with news editor James Foster about what we had seen, that upgrade assumption proved to be an understatement. The Gatso T-series platform, which will be unveiled to the wo
  • Speed cameras yield long-term safety benefits, IIHS study shows
    September 2, 2015
    A speed-camera program in a large community near Washington, DC, has led to long-term changes in driver behaviour and substantial reductions in deaths and injuries, a study by the Insurance Institute for Highway Safety (IIHS) shows. Automated speed enforcement is gradually becoming more common around the country but remains relatively rare, with only 138 jurisdictions operating such programs as of last month. According to IIHS, if all US communities had speed-camera programs like the one IIHS studied in