Skip to main content

Nedap launches next generation of ANPR platform

Dutch identification technology company Nedap has launched two more cameras for its automatic number plate recognition (ANPR) platform. The advanced ANPR Lumo can be applied in challenging vehicular access control applications, including in regions with license plates that include different font formats. The ANPR Access V2 is the successor of Nedap’s ANPR Access, offering better performance while being fully compatible with existing installations, says the company. Both new cameras easily integrate
January 3, 2019 Read time: 2 mins

Dutch identification technology company Nedap has launched two more cameras for its automatic number plate recognition (ANPR) platform.

The advanced ANPR Lumo can be applied in challenging vehicular access control applications, including in regions with license plates that include different font formats.

The ANPR Access V2 is the successor of Nedap’s ANPR Access, offering better performance while being fully compatible with existing installations, says the company.

Both new cameras easily integrate with any third party security, parking and traffic management systems using their built-in Wiegand options. The available options for configuration and interfacing have been enhanced and extended, making ANPR a viable option for installations all over the world, including the Pacific and the US, according to the company.

Nedap also offers its TRANSIT platform consisting of semi-active RFID readers and tags (2.45GHz) that enable vehicle and driver identification up to 10m in the most robust way possible. TRANSIT is specifically designed to perform in high-security applications and under harsh environmental conditions, offering long-range identification of taxis, ambulances, buses and trucks.

Detroit roads are about to be given the assessment treatment from RoadBotics.

Related Content

  • Six easy steps to security
    October 22, 2018
    As security threats become increasingly vast and varied, multinationals are beginning to see the need for an effective global security operations centre to protect their organisation. James I. Chong spells out what is required. You know you need a global security operations centre (GSOC) to support what you’ve built, identify threats, and prevent disasters before they happen - but how do you know if it’s truly effective? There’s no shortage of information coming into operation centres. Too often, it’s the
  • Bus gate access control system to combat congestion
    February 25, 2013
    One of a number of recent improvements and developments that have been carried out in Wellingborough town centre as part of Northamptonshire County Council’s Highways initiative is the installation of an access control gate system that gives public transport vehicles sole access to a designated town centre route during peak times. The council hopes that the system, which uses long-range vehicle identification technology to allow only buses and taxis to enter the specified route between the hours of 0900 to
  • Cubic: predictive analytics is putting fortune tellers out of business
    November 23, 2018
    The rise of machine learning and artificial intelligence means that fortune tellers will soon be out of business. Ed Chavis takes a behind the scenes look at the world of predictive analytics ver since organisations started taking advantage of insights derived from Big Data, data scientists concentrated their efforts on the ability to make correct assumptions about the future. A few years later, with the help of automation, developments in machine learning (ML) and advancements in the application of a
  • Tattile shows speed enforcement, launches next-generation ANPR
    February 29, 2016
    Leading Italian ITS company Tattile is being tight-lipped about a world launch it is planning for Intertraffic Amsterdam 2016. However, the company promises that the new camera range it has designed and developed from the ground up is genuinely next-generation.