Skip to main content

MG Squared has a successful first quarter with deployments from Rotterdam to Toledo

MG Squared, the leader in lowering systems, has had a run of successful implementations worldwide in the first quarter of 2013. From Toledo to Rotterdam, MG Squared lowering systems are making it easier to install, maintain, repair and replace camera systems deployed on transportation infrastructure.
April 23, 2013 Read time: 2 mins

93 MG Squared, the leader in lowering systems, has had a run of successful implementations worldwide in the first quarter of 2013. From Toledo to Rotterdam, MG Squared lowering systems are making it easier to install, maintain, repair and replace camera systems deployed on transportation infrastructure.

For the first time, the Connecticut DOT is building MG Squared's to be delivered lowering systems directly into a bridge structure. Without the need for a trailer, the agency will be able to place cameras anywhere on the Pearl Harbor Memorial Bridge in New Haven.

In Rotterdam, engineers are deploying MG Squared lowering systems for lock and dam facilities in the southern part of the city. The first 18 units have already shipped with more than 100 additional units expected by the end of the year.

In the U.S. Midwest, hundreds of MG Squared lowering systems are being upgraded with new dual analogue and IP contact connectors throughout Wisconsin to accommodate the state’s move to high-definition IP cameras. Additional lowering systems are also being added. And in Toledo, the Ohio DOT is relying on MG Squared’s dual analogue and IP contact connectors as the agency upgrades to IP cameras while still requiring interoperability with its existing test gear. Without the dual capability, ODOT would have had to replace its entire test infrastructure.

%$Linker: 2 Asset <?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-16"?><dictionary /> 4 12495 0 oLinkAsset <span class="mouselink">www.LoweringSystems.com</span> www.loweringsystems.com/ false /EasySiteWeb/GatewayLink.aspx?alId=12495 false false%>

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Intertraff shows D-cop speed and red light enforcement camera
    March 24, 2014
    Intertraff is unveiling its next generation speed and red light enforcement camera, D-cop. The company, which has installed hundreds of cameras worldwide from the USA to India, has been developing and producing ANPR cameras and software alongside speed and red light cameras for 15 years.
  • More cables in existing ducting with MaxCell’s no-dig CSRS
    April 23, 2013
    CSRS is a new no-dig technology and construction method from MaxCell that removes inner ducting from around active fiber optic cables with virtually no load on cable and no interruption of service. Inner ducts can be are removed at a rate of up to 3m (10ft) per min and up to 90% conduit space is recovered. The cables fall to bottom of conduit allowing up to nine more cables to be placed in recovered space. Replacing with new ducting can cost upwards of $3000 per metre ($1,000 per foot) in cities.
  • Sensys notches up sales success
    March 24, 2014
    Swedish-headquartered Sensys Traffic is looking forward to a very successful Intertraffic event. On the basis that success breeds success, in just the last few weeks alone, the company has notched up important sales. Sensys has received sub-orders worth over €9.5 million from the Swedish Transport Administration to supply measurement systems and measurement cabinets for traffic safety cameras for the Swedish ATC system, with indications of further business volume in the forthcoming years. Earlier this month
  • Lumenera in the picture at ITS
    April 22, 2013
    Camera supplier Lumenera is exhibiting its camera systems at ITS America first time under its own name. Previously the company’s cameras have been exhibited alongside the traffic surveillance and enforcement products into which they are incorporated.