Skip to main content

IRD opens online store for US customers

International Road Dynamics (IRD) has launched a new online store, PeopleCounterStore.com, offering a selection of people counters, vehicle counters and accessories for sale to customers in the United States. The store offers a full selection of people counters including unidirectional and bidirectional pedestrian counters with or without count display. It also offers a selection of IRD's top selling counters and classifiers including Traffic Ace accumulators and Mini TRS Plus classifiers. A Mini TRS P
November 4, 2015 Read time: 2 mins
69 International Road Dynamics (IRD) has launched a new online store, PeopleCounterStore.com, offering a selection of people counters, vehicle counters and accessories for sale to customers in the United States.
 
The store offers a full selection of people counters including unidirectional and bidirectional pedestrian counters with or without count display. It also offers a selection of IRD's top selling counters and classifiers including Traffic Ace accumulators and Mini TRS Plus classifiers. A Mini TRS Plus kit, comprising everything needed to start counting vehicles, is also available.

"We are really excited to launch this website which will allow us to improve the quality of our service and give customers the option of placing product orders at any time. We expect PeopleCounterStore.com to be of great benefit to our vehicle counter customers who need to replenish stocks of consumables like road tube, clamps and nails. It will also help people interested in pedestrian counters to find our newest products in that category," said Scott Sherwood, manager of Manufacturing, US Operations. "We will continue to take phone orders at our Spring Grove and Canadian operations as many traffic classifier purchasers are looking for customised products."

Related Content

  • October 26, 2017
    Data collection becoming a crowded market
    New ways of gathering data can revolutionise traffic and travel management, so is the writing on the wall for the traditional methods? Jon Masters reports. There are two big industries that stand to be revolutionised by massive increases in data – healthcare and transportation, says Finlay Clarke, the UK managing director of the smartphone sat nav traffic app, Waze. “At present we’re really only at the start of how cities, in particular, will be transformed,” he says.
  • November 26, 2013
    New name offers new solutions
    Pete Goldin examines Nokia’s rationale for combining its location services, digital mapping and other capabilities under the HERE brand. While it has divested itself of its mobile phone business to Microsoft, Nokia has kept hold of its HERE business unit and brand which incorporates the company’s location services with digital mapping and other capabilities. The creation of HERE is much more than rebranding as its services are heading off the map and into the cloud. “HERE offers the first location cloud
  • February 3, 2012
    Regional, national managed enforcement for developing nations
    Robot is offering nationwide enforcement services to both developed and developing countries.
  • January 26, 2012
    Improving driver information, making in-vehicle systems a reality
    Scott J. McCormick, president of the Connected Vehicle Trade Association, considers what we have to do next to make the more widespread deployment of automotive telematics a reality