Skip to main content

Wireless weighing

Intercomp's PT300 portable wheel load scale is now available with RFX wireless weighing as standard equipment. Standard alkaline batteries that last up to 300 hours are used and encryption ensures secure wireless connection. Lightweight (weighing only 37lb) and accurate, this all-aluminium design is available in capacities up to 20,000lb. Intercomp says the user will also find new and improved menu options and enhanced diagnostic menus.
January 31, 2012 Read time: 1 min
1982 Intercomp's PT300 portable wheel load scale is now available with RFX wireless weighing as standard equipment. Standard alkaline batteries that last up to 300 hours are used and encryption ensures secure wireless connection.

Lightweight (weighing only 37lb) and accurate, this all-aluminium design is available in capacities up to 20,000lb. Intercomp says the user will also find new and improved menu options and enhanced diagnostic menus.

RFX Wireless PT300 wheel load scales are offered in two, four or six-pad systems which include a handheld RFX wireless weighing indicator, totalising cable, universal charging cable and transport/storage case.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • New Hampshire plans for tomorrow’s communication
    August 21, 2017
    Someone once likened predicting the future to ‘nailing a jelly to the wall’. With ITS, C-ITS and V2X technology progressing at such a pace, predicting the future is more akin to trying to nail three jellies to the wall – but only having one nail. And yet with roadways having a lifetime measured in decades, that is exactly what highway engineers and traffic planners are expected to do. Fortunately, New Hampshire DoT (NHDoT) believes its technological advances may be able to provide a solution. The Central Ne
  • Kapsch ‘opens the way’ to interoperability
    July 30, 2013
    Richard Turnock, chief technology officer of Kapsch TrafficCom North America explains what advantages its newly-opened TDM protocol can offer as a US-wide standard for tolling interoperability. The electronic tolling industry across the United States is evolving. Historically it was characterised by clusters of interoperability where a motorist may be able to use the same transponder across a large area, such as the 15-State E-ZPass system, or be confined to a single State system. Now, however, the industry
  • Why keeping count is so important for traffic management
    November 21, 2023
    Traffic engineers need to have multiple solutions in their toolbox to complete the most accurate and safe data collection programmes possible, explains Wes Guckert of The Traffic Group
  • Crash prevention systems improving rapidly says IIHS
    June 2, 2014
    According to its latest report, less than a year into a new Insurance |Institute for Highway Safety (IIHS) ratings program for front crash prevention, auto manufacturers are making strides in adopting the most beneficial systems with automatic braking capabilities and are offering the features on a wider variety of models. Twenty-one of 24 cars and SUVs, all 2014 models unless noted, earn an advanced or higher rating in the latest round of IIHS evaluations. "We are already seeing improvements from automaker