Skip to main content

AMG Systems makes contact with new fibre optic line

Products are for ITS set-ups using fibre optics for secure distance transmission
By Adam Hill February 7, 2024 Read time: 2 mins
New line consists of fibre optic video, video, and data, serial data and contact closure products for signal transport

AMG Systems has introduced a new fibre optic video, data and contact closure line.

Designed for ITS installations where fibre optic transmission is used for secure distance transmission, AMG says they will support a new generation of multi-megapixel coaxial cameras which require ultra-high security.

The fibre optic transmission line is not IP-based, "disallowing any potential security risk into the network", AMG insists.

There is no latency due to no encoding used as with an Ethernet system, the company adds. 

The AMG line consists of fibre optic video, video, and data, serial data and contact closure products for signal transport.

The portfolio comprises the AMGFIB-1VT/(VR) Series of single channel video transmitter/receiver, with one Duplex RS422/485 Serial Data, two Contact Closure, and supporting all modern SD & HD video formats including CVBS (PAL, NTSC, SECAM), CVI, TVI & AHD and camera resolutions up to 1960p with SD, HD, up to 5-megapixel camera types all major brands. 

There is also an AMGFIB-1SD Series industrially hardened serial data transceiver with one Duplex RS422/485 Serial Data, and two Contact Closures; plus the AMGFIB-3CC Series Industrially Hardened Contact Closure Transceiver with two Contact Closures. 

All three product lines are designed in the USA and UK, manufactured in the UK in an ISO Certified AMG facility, are hardened for use in challenging environments, capable of meeting NEMA TS-2 standards, and lifetime warranted.

“Although legacy fibre optic transmission systems are being replaced by IP, there are thousands of fibre optic transmission networks still in use," explains Steve Clarke, AMG's managing director.

"With the push toward IP, no real effort has been directed toward modernising traditional fibre optic video and data products. This next generation of AMG fibre optic products is a major step forward."

The company's technical director Tom Exley explains: “Our engineering team looked at what was currently available, identified weaknesses, and engineered our fibre optic product line to overcome those weaknesses. One of the big issues facing the competition is parts availability. Competing fibre optic products were developed 15-20 years ago, sourcing 20-year-old components is a challenge, and that’s likely the reason for extended production delays and price increases."

"The AMG line is all new," he adds. "New designs, and new components and now manufactured in an ISO9001-certified facility. And, most importantly, they are available when you need them. We believe in the quality and stand behind them with lifetime support.”

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Moxa launches NEMA compliant PTZ camera
    June 28, 2016
    Moxa´s rugged 1080P PTZ speed dome IP camera VPort 66-2MP series, which is now compliant with the NEMA TS2 Section 2 certification, features 1080P full HD resolution at 60 FPS and an H.264 PTZ dome designed for use in harsh outdoor environments such as intelligent transportation surveillance applications.
  • Wireless video and ethernet
    January 31, 2012
    AMG Systems has unveiled Skywave II which the company says is especially adapted for transmitting video and telemetry in the 5.5 GHz to 5.7 GHz licence-free band. Offering various configurations from simple point-to-point to multiple camera applications, Skywave II comes with two different options: using IP cameras, in which case customers only require the radio network components from AMG, and NVR software in the receiving control centre. It is also possible to use standard analogue cameras with the additi
  • GridMatrix goes back to the future in New York City
    September 25, 2023
    Legacy traffic management infrastructure doesn’t have to be a marker of the past: software upgrades can bring it into the present in a cost-effective and timely way, says Gordon Feller
  • Theia’s compact 4K telephoto lenses
    May 1, 2022
    Portfolio is particularly good in NIR illumination with only a five micron focus shift