Skip to main content

Bounce back with Berry’s spring steel buffer

Oops! Another small knock to your car in the car park. But thanks to the new spring steel buffer from Berry, it is the barrier that yields this time and not your vehicle’s bodywork. A key feature of the buffer is its deflection – typically around 300mm, according to Berry, part of the Hill & Smith group. This means that impact forces are absorbed by the buffers rather than transmitted directly to the mounting bolts or towards deformation of the railing system. They usually require one or two 20mm bolts.
March 21, 2018 Read time: 2 mins
Spring is in the air: James Fildes

Oops! Another small knock to your car in the car park. But thanks to the new spring steel buffer from 8708 Berry, it is the barrier that yields this time and not your vehicle’s bodywork.

A key feature of the buffer is its deflection – typically around 300mm, according to Berry, part of the Hill & Smith group. This means that impact forces are absorbed by the buffers rather than transmitted directly to the mounting bolts or towards deformation of the railing system.

They usually require one or two 20mm bolts. Embedment need be only 80mm and the pull-out loading is just 50kN. This is, in fact, a quarter the number of bolts needed at half the depth – which also saves on installation and repair time.

Officially called the RB1 buffer, it has a small footprint in the parking bay. Overall parking length is reduced only by the 100mm depth of the barrier.

However, sufficient free space must be available behind for barrier deflection.

A base plate can be used, if required, to spread the impact load on the buffer over a wider surface area to avoid damage to the substrate and to assist in levelling the buffer installation on uneven surfaces.

Stand: 1.202

%$Linker: 2 External <?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-16"?><dictionary /> 0 0 0 link-external www.berrysystems.co.uk Berry Systems website links false http://www.berrysystems.co.uk/ false false%>

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Workshop: Self-Driving Cars: Strategic Implications for the Auto Industry
    March 6, 2017
    Autelligence is hosting a one-day workshop on self-driving cars and the associated strategic implications for the auto industry, led by renowned expert Dr Alexander Hars. The workshop begins in Frankfurt, Germany on 23 March and arrives in Auburn Hills, Michigan on 16 May. The event aims to improve understanding of the strategic implications for the auto industry, its suppliers and related industries, as well as the potential impact on automobile design, model mix and volumes, brands and customer re
  • Inrix integrates parking solution with ultrasonic sensors
    January 3, 2018
    Inrix has introduced new technology that uses ultrasonic sensors (USS) to scan, collect, and transmit real-time parking occupancy information to help guide drivers to available parking spaces. It will also help to enhance the quality of Inrix Parking. As the car is moving down the road, USS transmit sound waves and collects data on parked cars and empty spaces. It is then sent anonymously to the Parking Cloud to be analysed and combined with the parking availability prediction engine which determines block
  • Barnacle Parking unveils efficient enforcement system
    March 19, 2018
    Barnacle Parking is here at Intertraffic to launch the Barnacle, a revolutionary device which enables a more efficient parking enforcement system across the whole lifecycle of enforcement activities. As the name suggests, the bright yellow device sticks to the windshield using two suction cups with over 450 Kgs (1,000 lbs) of combined force providing a safer, faster and more efficient way for officials to immobilise vehicles. The device can simply be placed across the windshield, suctioned to the glass and
  • Cohda Wireless to trial AVs which can talk to each other in Australia
    October 15, 2018
    Cohda Wireless is to trial two autonomous vehicles (AVs) in Australia this month. The MKZ Sedans can communicate with traffic lights and each other – and the company also expects them to be able to detect pedestrians around blind corners. The initiative, approved by the South Australian government, will take place in Adelaide’s central business district on closed-off roads. Dr Paul Gray, chief executive officer of Cohda Wireless, told ABC that the technology is intended to reduce the chance of huma