Skip to main content

Improved safety with Snoline’s latest reflective tapes

Two new temporary road marking tapes are being offered by safety specialist Snoline. Part of Lindsay Transportation Solutions, Snoline says that its new Tempoline and Profiline products are easy to install and offer high conspicuity.
March 26, 2014 Read time: 2 mins
Alberto Pedroni of Snoline
Two new temporary road marking tapes are being offered by safety specialist 124 Snoline. Part of 7613 Lindsay Transportation Solutions, Snoline says that its new Tempoline and Profiline products are easy to install and offer high conspicuity.

The Tempoline WR HP14 product features a flexible rubber layer that is reinforced with polyester fabric, allowing it to be removed easily. The upper surface structure and special glass beads are said to provide high visibility in all climactic conditions, particularly at night and in wet weather.

The product is said to offer high visibility for duties in traffic deviations and temporary symbols around construction zones. The product is available in various widths and contains no harmful material, allowing it to be used in environmentally sensitive areas.

The tape and primer has to be stored in a cool, dry indoor facility and has to be used within 18 months from delivery. Ease of application is claimed and roads can be opened to traffic as soon as it is installed. Meanwhile, the Profiline T 14 tape shares the same high visibility in all conditions but is designed to offer high durability due to its special polymer construction and can be used in workzones for 6-12 month periods.

High skid resistance is claimed due to the embedded particles and embossed form and it can be used in temperatures from -10°C to 35°C as well as relative humidity up to 70%. It offers retroreflectivity of R5 in wet conditions and RW6 in dry weather as well as an anti-skid rating of S3.
%$Linker: 2 Asset <?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-16"?><dictionary /> 4 12643 0 oLinkAsset <span class="mouselink">www.snoline.com</span> Snoline web false /EasySiteWeb/GatewayLink.aspx?alId=12643 true false%>

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Submissions invited for Australia’s national tolling forum
    November 10, 2016
    Australia’s 2017 National electronic Tolling Forum (NeTC), Converging Smarter Tolling Technologies, which takes place in Sydney on 23-25 May, will address the challenges and opportunities faced by the tolling industry and their impact on business and personal mobility.
  • Compass first newsletter available
    February 21, 2013
    The synergy between two European transportation projects, the optimised CO-Modal PASSenger transport for reducing carbon emissions (Compass) and Optimising Passenger Transport Information to Materialise Insights for Sustainable Mobility (Optimism) has prompted the release of a joint newsletter to report their activities and findings. Both projects share common objectives. Through the scientific analysis of social behaviour, mobility patterns and business models they propose a set of strategies, recommendat
  • New traffic modelling software release
    January 31, 2012
    TSS-Transport Simulation Systems has announced the release of Aimsun 7 which takes the previous version's ability to integrate static traffic assignment, microscopic and mesoscopic modelling and then ramps up the concept of integration to a whole new level with the introduction of the hybrid simulator. TSS claims this eagerly awaited tool has long been at the top of the traffic modelling wish list and allows users to model large scale networks mesoscopically while zooming in microscopically on any areas tha
  • Comment: Be wary of fads – but embrace change
    June 26, 2018
    Along with death and taxes, there is one other certainty in modern life: change. In this issue of ITS International, Jarrett Walker (an urban transit expert who has unaccountably ruffled the feathers of Tesla’s Elon Musk) sensibly implies that we should be wary of fads, but there are some developments which require our full attention. Among these are connected and autonomous vehicles: try as we might to avoid them as dinner party topics of conversation, the world outside of ITS is waking up to the