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

  • Econolite introduces next generation ATC
    April 18, 2013
    The next generation of Econolite’s advanced traffic controllers (ATC), Cobalt is said to be the first controller to feature a new platform in advanced communications and user interface designed to accommodate the mobile computing environment. Its new user interface makes its operations and access to essential functions the most intuitive and hassle-free controller on the market today. Developed on the industry ATC standards, Cobalt provides a combination of ATC controller functionality with a breakthrough u
  • Tunnel network to relieve Istanbul's traffic congestion
    August 14, 2012
    A series of road tunnels is taking shape to help relieve Istanbul from crippling road congestion, with an extensive array of safety and management systems operating from a single ITS platform. Nino Sehagic reports. Traffic in Istanbul has historically been described simply as jammed. Severe congestion and chaotic use of available road space are characteristics of a city of more than one and a half million cars. Istanbul’s existing road network could not cope and was in urgent need of expansion, leading the
  • Next Generation 911, updating the US 911 emergency system
    February 1, 2012
    Continuing developments in telecommunications and public expectation have left the US's legacy, analogue 911 emergency call system trailing. Linda D. Dodge, Public Safety Program Manager for the ITS programme in USDOT's Research and Innovative Technology Administration, the sponsor of the Next Generation 911 initiative, writes about efforts towards updating
  • Additional functionality gives loops a continued lease of life
    March 20, 2014
    Two decades after the death of the inductive loops was predicted, Matt Zinn, technical services manager at Eberle Design says the technology still offers advantages. More than 20 years ago the emergence of video detection systems led many to foretell the end of inductive loops. In the intervening years advocates of radar, infrared and wireless detection technologies have also claimed that loops were on their way out. But in fact, by all calculations, the use of loops has actually increased and although