Skip to main content

AFC C-Line Console

US company AFC Industries, a manufacturer and designer of ergonomic command and control consoles, workstations, video walls, plasma carts and accessories, has released its C-Line Console. It features electronic height adjustment of the work surface at the touch of a button. Digital readouts enable every user to preserve and easily store optimal settings for surface placement.
March 20, 2012 Read time: 1 min
US company 4083 AFC Industries, a manufacturer and designer of ergonomic command and control consoles, workstations, video walls, plasma carts and accessories, has released its C-Line Console. It features electronic height adjustment of the work surface at the touch of a button. Digital readouts enable every user to preserve and easily store optimal settings for surface placement. The slat-wall monitor system lets the user slide monitor arms horizontally. Front and rear doors provide full access to bottom CPU enclosures while multi-channel cable management keeps wires neat and unobtrusive.

Related Content

  • September 3, 2015
    Christie offers wide range of stackable video cubes
    The Entero HB range of video cubes from audio and visual specialist Christie offers standard-sized, stackable, rear-screen and front-screen projection cubes. Front access design addresses space limitations with the ability to put the cubes directly up against a wall while maintaining performance, image quality and reliability.
  • June 3, 2016
    Philadelphia’s new TOC boasts advanced video wall
    Control room vision systems specialist Barco has collaborated with audio-visual integrator Vistacom to deliver an advanced video wall solution for the City of Philadelphia’s new traffic operations centre (TOC). A Barco video wall solution, complete with control room management (CMS) software and integrated with a Genetec video management system (VMS), helps the third largest signal system in the country better manage traffic flows and handle problems in real time to respond immediately to issues. Th
  • July 19, 2012
    Digital Light Processing transforms travel information
    David Crawford investigates the potential of new projection technology. Fifty years on from its invention of the microchip, US company Texas Instruments (TI) has compressed the technology into a surface area of just 4.3mm. As such, it forms the heart of a new Pico Digital Light Processing (DLP) system that is set to transform travel information delivery for millions of users on the move - by making it projectable.
  • July 22, 2021
    Control room tech ends data overload
    There have never been so many data sources available to traffic control centre operators – but too much data can be as bad as too little when making decisions. Adam Hill asks how control room technology companies can help operators screen out the white noise