Skip to main content

AGD Systems showcases market-leading solutions

Visitors to the AGD stand will also see the new, larger-zone AGD 645 Pedestrian Detector. With its increased 10x3m detection zone, just one 645 can cover an entire super-crossing, which can be up to 10m wide from pole to pole. Already seen in many locations worldwide, super-crossings are ever more prevalent, and AGD anticipates a great deal of interest in this enhanced product. Also on show from leading ITS solutions specialist AGD Systems at this year’s Intertraffic is the highly successful non-intrusive
March 20, 2018 Read time: 2 mins
AGD's Carl Jarvis

Visitors to the AGD stand will also see the new, larger-zone AGD 645 Pedestrian Detector. With its increased 10x3m detection zone, just one 645 can cover an entire super-crossing, which can be up to 10m wide from pole to pole. Already seen in many locations worldwide, super-crossings are ever more prevalent, and AGD anticipates a great deal of interest in this enhanced product.

Also on show from leading ITS solutions specialist 559 AGD Systems at this year’s Intertraffic is the highly successful non-intrusive, loop-replacing AGD 318 Traffic Control Radar. The company says the 318 is increasingly becoming the solution of choice for local authorities seeking a smart, cost-effective alternative to wear-prone loops and magnetometers.

AGD has a comprehensive range of ITS product solutions that are well suited to applications in international markets. Both the 318 and the 645 are proven in the UK to deliver unprecedented ease of deployment, integration and setup to allow maximum flexibility for evolving traffic models.

AGD Systems is part of The Traffic Group, formerly AGD Group, which recently acquired AV Systems, one of the world’s foremost suppliers of ANPR cameras. AGD Systems already works with MAV, supplying radar products to work alongside MAV’s IQ range of intelligent ANPR cameras, and the two companies are currently working on a number of other synergistic solutions.

Stand 10.102

%$Linker: 2 External <?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-16"?><dictionary /> 0 0 0 link-external www.agd-systems.com AGD Systems website link false https://www.agd-systems.com/ false false%>

Related Content

  • Kistler looks for speed camera synergies
    March 21, 2018
    Weigh-in-Motion (WIM) specialist Kistler says its move into speed camera enforcement will help complement its core activities. The firm acquired German company eso, which manufactures portable speed measurement devices, last year, and Tomas Pospisek, Kistler’s global market development manager for road & traffic, says: “We’re hoping this will bring us synergies. We’re monitoring the weight and they’re monitoring the speed. It’s an important step, for sure.” When it comes to WIM, Kistler still maintains ther
  • China’s Owleye shows bright idea
    March 20, 2018
    China’s Guangzhou Owleye Optoelectronic Technology is showing its new solar-powered traffic cone light, which aims to improve safety when warnings must be given to drivers of roadworks or other potential dangers. To ensure maximum flexibility with an operator’s existing equipment, the new light has a stainless steel ring that can be installed directly on to any size of traffic cone.
  • China’s Owleye shows bright idea
    March 20, 2018
    China’s Guangzhou Owleye Optoelectronic Technology is showing its new solar-powered traffic cone light, which aims to improve safety when warnings must be given to drivers of roadworks or other potential dangers. To ensure maximum flexibility with an operator’s existing equipment, the new light has a stainless steel ring that can be installed directly on to any size of traffic cone.
  • Trafficware new wireless detection system
    April 22, 2013
    Visitors to the ITS America Annual Meeting have the opportunity to see a new wireless roadway detection system from Trafficware. Operating under a Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) patent in an exclusive license agreement, the company’s engineers developed the Valence Pod, a wireless system that uses roadway sensors to detect the