Skip to main content

Avery Dennison shows new traffic sign printer

The latest traffic sign printer from Avery Dennison will produce CE-certified signs faster and less expensively than those of rivals, claims the company.
April 6, 2016 Read time: 2 mins
Marco van der Linden of Avery Dennison
The latest traffic sign printer from Avery Dennison will produce CE-certified signs faster and less expensively than those of rivals, claims the company.

The machine starts out as a Mutoh Valuejet graphics printer. However, the Japanese manufacturer “has completely optimised it to be used with our sheeting, inks and reflective overlay”, said Marco van der Linden, Avery Dennison’s marketing manager for the product.

With all these modifications, the Valuejet becomes an Avery Dennison-branded TrafficJet, said van der Linden.

“It’s specially designed for spot colours, it is CE-certified, which means the signs it produces can be used anywhere within Europe and it has a warranty for up to 12 years.

“There’s a difference between a graphics printer and something that can print traffic signs, because the latter have a lot more regulations to comply with.”

The TrafficJet complies with these regulations, but its abilities as a graphics printer gives it added capabilities, he said.

Traditionally, traffic signs are printed as a series of hand-mounted layers, which take time and manpower to place. A graphics printer, however, can lay down multiple colours simultaneously. It is also ideally equipped to cope with sequentially-numbered signs, such as those that appear at 100-metre intervals on European roads, where large numbers of signs, identical apart from a couple of digits, need to be produced.

It can also print logos, such as those of local authorities, on to the signs, as well as dates of manufacture that detail the warrant length.

The final benefit of the new machine, said van der Linden, is that it produces signs at around one-third of the cost of rivals: “This is being aimed at small and medium-sized companies. Existing machines are very large and are only bought by large companies.”

Related Content

  • Delta demonstrates new RetroSign GRX retroreflectometer
    March 20, 2018
    Delta is showing and demonstrating its range of retroreflectometer instruments, including the new RetroSign GRX, the company’ third-generation instrument for measuring retroreflection of road traffic signs, high visibility clothing, conspicuity tapes and number plates. RetroSign GRX can measure up to seven observation angles simultaneously, up to eight entrance angles using smart adapters, and offers many new features like automatic detection of sign colour, picture of sign, sign colour contrast, sign
  • Daktronics’ new sign ideal for high occupancy tolling, travel time
    May 15, 2015
    Daktronics’ participation at the ITS America Annual Meeting will feature the company’s latest transportation innovation – the recently released single-line 20mm HRFC (high-resolution, full-colour) dedicated dynamic message sign, the VM-1020 Series LED display. According to Daktronics, transportation agencies now have the ability to show alternate character and background colours such as black alphanumeric text on a white background on a single line display. With the sign’s HRFC capabilities, users can also
  • Carol Schweiger: "I never looked back"
    January 14, 2025
    Carol Schweiger is a legend of the ITS industry. She talks to Adam Hill about her career, real train sets, equity, AI, quantum computing – and the difficulty of behaviour change
  • Are road user charging systems too complicated?
    February 27, 2012
    At any conference or exhibition, it tends to be the ad libs and asides, the departures from the scripted or official lines, which are the most telling. In mid-February, ITS-UK's Road User Charging Interest Group met in London. The event was no exception to that statement. Keith Mortimer, the Group's chairman, and his colleagues put together one of the better programmes on charging and tolling that I've seen in recent years. Sadly, however, the very positive presentations on deployments and technological pro