Skip to main content

Swarco puts the DVSA in control with new prism sign installation

Five prism signs have been installed Swarco Traffic to manage traffic control approaching an Enforcement Checksite operated by the Driver & Vehicle Standards Agency (DVSA) on the M74 motorway in Scotland. The signs have been installed at strategic points along the M74 by Beattock Summit to guide heavy vehicles into the nearside lane and direct selected vehicles into the weighbridge and inspection area. The signs feature a combination of control solutions with urban traffic management and control (UTMC)
May 20, 2015 Read time: 2 mins
Five prism signs have been installed 129 Swarco Traffic to manage traffic control approaching an Enforcement Checksite operated by the Driver & Vehicle Standards Agency (DVSA) on the M74 motorway in Scotland. The signs have been installed at strategic points along the M74 by Beattock Summit to guide heavy vehicles into the nearside lane and direct selected vehicles into the weighbridge and inspection area.

The signs feature a combination of control solutions with urban traffic management and control (UTMC) and 503 Highways Agency Standard interfaces. This provides the DVSA with the ability to control, monitor and provide status reporting including prism status, power failure, heater failure, communications failure and local control override. The signs can also be operated directly from a police control point.

Additional controllers and temperature sensors can also be included, including a de-icing cycle which can be programmed to come into operation in temperatures below two degrees centigrade. The prisms are automatically rotated by approximately 10 degrees in a forward and reverse direction at pre-determined times, thus preventing the build up of ice across the prisms.

A particular innovation is the use of a sinusoidal drive: it starts with a high torque, increases its speed during the turning process, and then slows down at the end to ensure an exact prism alignment. The drive then locks the prisms to protect them from external influences such as wind.

Derek Williamson, head of Sales for Swarco Traffic, says that this innovative drive technology has multiple benefits: “Not only does it help prevent the signs from being frozen in position – a viable hazard given the location – but it also significantly reduces mechanical wear and tear and maximises the sign’s life cycle.”

The local DVSA contracts manager is pleased with the outcome: “The new prism sign installation has so far proven very reliable,” she says, “and we will also be working with Swarco in ensuring the ongoing service and maintenance of the systems installed on what is one of the busiest routes into Scotland.”

Related Content

  • January 26, 2016
    Swarco signs aid peak time traffic flow on residential streets
    The London Borough of Camden has installed two Swarco Prism signs at either end of a width-restricted road in a bid to curb drivers using the road to avoid congestion during peak periods. The signs are timed to change at peak periods of day to create a short one-way section and ease traffic flow. Outside these hours, priority working signs manage the narrow stretch of road. The signs include integrated PC controls, which enable operators to remotely control and alter the timing of the switchover as req
  • June 18, 2013
    Vital sign of the times
    Part of Solihull Metropolitan Borough Council’s Anita Scheme to improve traffic management as well as accessibility and information for cyclists, pedestrians and bus passengers, UK company Vital Technology’s Vital Tri-Sign variable message sign has been installed at key locations in the area. The Highways Agency-approved Vital Tri-Sign is a series of rotating prisms; one face of the prism advises vehicles of normal running conditions, the other faces give information on unusual circumstances such as a predi
  • February 1, 2012
    Developments in urban traffic management and control
    Mark Cartwright, Centaur Consulting, discusses developments in urban traffic management and control. Despite the concept of UTMC (Urban Traffic Management and Control) having been around for some years now, there remains a significant rump of confusion as to its relationship with its similar-sounding cousin UTC (Urban Traffic Control). To many people, the two are one and the same. However, this is not the case.
  • October 18, 2017
    Swarco to present new innovations at Road Expo Scotland 2017
    Swarco will showcase two new innovations, Profectus and Zephyr, at Road Expo Scotland that are designed with the intention of providing local authorities with control of school warning signs and control over traffic assets and strategy. Profectus is a central processing board that allows school signs and vehicle activated signs to be monitored and programmed to make the surrounding area safe during term time.