Skip to main content

Yunex Traffic launches Yutraffic Actis

Product replaces Helios signals range and includes new mounting solution
By David Arminas September 19, 2024 Read time: 2 mins
Actis signals are 50% lighter and consume 50% less energy, Yunex says (© Yunex Traffic)

Following completion of on-street trials, Yunex Traffic has launched the Yutraffic Actis traffic signal range as a replacement for its Helios signals solution.

Yunex said that Actis signals are 50% lighter and consume 50% less energy, producing “a real step change in sustainability, technology, value, and performance”. 

Actis will enable local authorities to further reduce the use and cost of energy, improve installation and maintenance efficiencies, including reduced on-street disruption, and reduce their carbon footprint.

The product features a predominance of plastic body parts, with its aspect bodies, rear hatches, doors and backing boards, all manufactured from 100% recycled materials. There are no combined parts; at the end of its life the components can be separated into different material types to allow 100% recycling.

A completely new optical system uses the latest LED technology. There is a coloured outer dome lens and a highly-optimised series of lenses to allow the focusing of light on the desired location, minimising the need for vertical adjustment.

To ensure easy installation and minimum on-street disruption, Actis features a completely new pintle and bracket mounting system. This means that signal heads can be quickly mounted and positioned closer to the pole, providing a cleaner, enhanced appearance.  

Actis signal heads can also be retrofitted to existing installations, enabling authorities to benefit immediately from the product’s power savings and carbon reductions. This allows them to replace any existing halogen lamp units with the next generation of efficient LED technology, staving off any operational threat from the obsolescence of halogen lamps. The reduction in product weight of around 50% means that handling Actis on site is safer, faster and easier, leading to less traffic disruption during installation phases.

“Actis sets new industry standards, with innovation evident in every element of the product’s design and performance,” said Wilke Reints, managing director of Yunex Traffic in the UK. “From new optical and mounting systems to the unibody design and reduced power consumption, Actis delivers sustainability, performance and cost benefits at every stage.”

The complete unit will be manufactured at Yunex Traffic’s production facility in Poole, southern England. 

Related Content

  • July 3, 2023
    Yunex Plus+ Advantage reduces temporary traffic management disruption
    Solution uses permanent signal equipment as temporary during scheme deployment phase
  • November 30, 2015
    Siemens delivers pedestrian countdown at traffic signals
    First shown at Traffex 2015 in April, production of Siemens’ new Pedestrian Countdown at Traffic Signals (PCaTS) is now fully under way. PCaTS informs pedestrians how long they have to cross the road after the far-side green man signal has gone out. By providing a visible countdown of the time remaining before the appearance of the red man, PCaTS is intended to give pedestrians a better understanding of the time available to complete crossing, reducing anxiety once the green man is no longer displayed. B
  • May 14, 2012
    UK county looking for major savings from Siemens traffic light upgrade
    A major programme to upgrade traffic lights at 78 junctions and 100 pedestrian crossings across Norfolk, in the UK, with new energy-saving LED signals from Siemens is nearing completion. The retrofit project to supply, install and maintain all 178 sites is estimated to provide up to 78 per cent power consumption and carbon savings for Norfolk County Council (NCC). The new contract includes an innovative cost benefit payback solution provided by Siemens Financial Services.
  • February 25, 2015
    Substantial savings from smarter street lighting
    As authorities strive to reduce expenditure and carbon emissions, Colin Sowman looks at some of the smart ways of managing street lighting while containing costs and maintaining safety. Street lighting can account for 40% of an authority’s energy consumption. So, faced with the need to reduce outgoings, some authorities are looking for smart ways of managing street lighting or even turning off swathes of street lights in the small hours. Back in 2008 the E-street Initiative report concluded that authorities