Skip to main content

Avery Dennison showcases V-8000 Visiflex

Avery Dennison will use Intertraffic Amsterdam 2018 to demonstrate and showcase its new V-8000 Visiflex, a reflective prismatic vinyl for the emergency vehicle market. VisiFlex V-800 Prismatic Vinyl film, specially designed for fleet applications to enhance safety, is available in six vibrant colours. Its vinyl construction makes it extremely flexible and suitable for simple curves. According to the company, converters and installers appreciate how its solid construction plotter cuts with ease, eliminates
February 22, 2018 Read time: 2 mins
7685 Avery Dennison will use Intertraffic Amsterdam 2018 to demonstrate and showcase its new V-8000 Visiflex, a reflective prismatic vinyl for the emergency vehicle market.


VisiFlex V-800 Prismatic Vinyl film, specially designed for fleet applications to enhance safety, is available in six vibrant colours. Its vinyl construction makes it extremely flexible and suitable for simple curves. According to the company, converters and installers appreciate how its solid construction plotter cuts with ease, eliminates tedious edge sealing, and simplifies application to vehicles. Once fitted on a fleet, the bold block pattern of VisiFlex creates a fresh, sophisticated, modern look which will make the vehicles stand out - day and night.

Avery Dennison, whose technology has been making highway and street safety solutions brighter with prismatic signs since 1924, says that its VisiFlex reflective prismatic vinyl is an innovation in vehicle reflectivity. The company has uploaded a new film about the material to its website. As the company states, no longer does high-impact visibility come at the cost of durability. VisiFlex ensures safety and emergency vehicles have the highest possible reflectivity with maximum durability, and can also make custom car graphics stand out with bright and sophisticated accents.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • US adopts automated enforcement… gradually
    March 4, 2014
    The US automated enforcement market is in rude health as the number of systems and applications continues to grow and broaden. Jason Barnes reports. Blessed and cursed – arguably, in equal measure – with a constitution which stresses the right to self-expression and determination, the US has had a harder journey than most to the more widespread use of automated traffic enforcement systems. In some cases, opposition to the concept has been extreme – including the murder of a roadside civil enforcement offici
  • Smart Spanish city trials cell-based traffic management
    November 7, 2013
    David Crawford reports on an urban electronic nervous system. The northern Spanish city of Santander – historically a port - is now an emerging technology showcase attracting global attention as a prototype for a medium-sized smart city of the future. In a move to determine the optimal use of available data, it is creating a de-facto experimental laboratory for sensor and mobile phone-based urban traffic management and environmental monitoring innovations.
  • Smoother running on Florida’s I-4
    March 11, 2025
    The Sunshine State is pioneering new implementations of V2X tech designed to smooth traffic flows and save lives. Andrew Stone shares the story so far…
  • Cooperative systems - traffic management centres of the future?
    February 1, 2012
    What will the traffic management centre of the future see and do? TNO's Frans op de Beek, who was responsible for putting together the Cooperative Mobility Demonstrations which included the Traffic Management Centre at this year's Intertraffic exhibition in Amsterdam, offers some insights. The road tours and demonstrations which took place at this year's Intertraffic to mark the conclusion of COOPERS, CVIS and SAFESPOT, the European Commission's (EC's) three major cooperative mobility projects, gave visitor