Skip to main content

Next-gen driver feedback sign

TraffiCalm Systems has announced the first product in its new line of driver feedback signs for 2012. The fully-featured and affordably priced new DFB sign has a fully enclosed electronic control system that can be easily removed from the mounting frame as a complete unit for simplified installation and repair. The display shows the speed of approaching vehicles using amber LEDs.
August 15, 2012 Read time: 1 min
4060 TraffiCalm Systems has announced the first product in its new line of driver feedback signs for 2012. The fully-featured and affordably priced new DFB sign has a fully enclosed electronic control system that can be easily removed from the mounting frame as a complete unit for simplified installation and repair.

The display shows the speed of approaching vehicles using amber LEDs. All of TraffiCalm Systems’ DriveBrite radar DFB sign products feature a selection of available intelligent power options that make them ideal for use in a wide variety of settings along with solar options.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Lacroix launches new range of multi-colour LED VMS
    February 26, 2014
    Lacroix Trafic will use Intertraffic Amsterdam 2014 to present a wide range of ITS products such as traffic lights, traffic controllers, and data-collection stations, variable speed limit signs, directional lane signs as well as to unveil a new range of multicolour LED full matrix variable messages signs (VMS). Using the latest CMS diode technology means these multi-coloured messages can be viewed at distances of up to 300 metres. The signs are easy to configure, with tool-free maintenance, and of course
  • 'Green' traffic signs
    January 30, 2012
    A new solar-powered, wireless automated rotary drum sign system, manufactured by Skyline Products Traffic Division and currently being deployed in Texas, is being hailed as one of the greenest, least expensive, most flexible means of managing traffic flow.
  • Swarco McCain adds VMS to Virginia
    December 19, 2022
    Signs can be run by AC or DC power, plus six of them are off-grid and solar powered
  • Knowing when to slow down
    August 8, 2018
    Level 2 driver assistance vehicles have little problem reading fixed metal signs at the roadside - but it’s a different story with VMS in tunnels, finds Alan Dron. Following a series of hands-free driving tests in tunnels, an Australian road authority believes that car manufacturers have to up their game before vehicles have the required levels of competence to consistently perform ‘assisted driving’ tasks. The trials, in the state of Victoria late last year, tested the ability of several vehicles to stay