Skip to main content

Cyalume chemical light improves safety

French chemical light maker Cyalume Technologies, working in collaboration with British company Amey, has adapted the existing features of Cyalume Snaplights to the specific needs of railway maintenance work on UK railways. The light sticks now provide a guaranteed 12 hours of light, resulting in improved safety for workers and making it easier to locate cables which had previously been marked only by a stroke of spray paint, which is not visible at night.
March 19, 2012 Read time: 2 mins
French chemical light maker 4073 Cyalume Technologies, working in collaboration with British company Amey, has adapted the existing features of Cyalume Snaplights to the specific needs of railway maintenance work on UK railways. The light sticks now provide a guaranteed 12 hours of light, resulting in improved safety for workers and making it easier to locate cables which had previously been marked only by a stroke of spray paint, which is not visible at night. Additionally, use of these variously coloured, maintenance-free light tubes alerts all rail workers to potential hazards and helps distinguish personnel belonging different divisions. They also serve as an alternative to traditional rail yard lighting towers, usually powered by generators.

As Nathalie Rizzo, CEO of Cyalume Technologies, points out, the product development carried out with the the rail industry is entirely transferable to other sectors. “Easy to use and economical, Cyalume light sticks may well prove to be a major factor in improving safety conditions for a variety of infrastructure maintenance sites, as well as emergency services such as fire and police,” she said.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Green requirements of traffic video systems
    February 2, 2012
    Traficon's Head of Product and Application Management Robin Collaert offers up a discussion of the likely future green requirements of traffic video systems. At the most basic levels, ITS has the potential to significantly reduce the amounts of time which vehicles spend waiting at intersections, and less time spent waiting means less in the way of vehicular emissions. All of that will hardly come as news to most laypeople, let alone transport professionals. However, the reality is that even today too many r
  • Wi-Fi win-win for mass transit
    October 31, 2014
    David Crawford explores passenger and operator benefits of on-board Wi-Fi Urban commuters’ growing demand for continuous – and reliable - internet connectivity is spurring network operators into the rapid installation of high-grade Wi-Fi access on their surface and underground networks, as well as in their stations. Such moves are often a key part of strategies to maintain and increase ridership levels.
  • C-V2X protects roadside workers in Virginia 
    October 2, 2020
    Audi, VDoT and Qualcomm work on deployment which utilises Q8 vehicles and C-V2X vests
  • Vehicle ownership - a thing of the past?
    May 22, 2012
    Convergence of electron-powered vehicles with connected vehicle technologies could mean that only a few decades from now the idea of owning a vehicle will be entirely alien to the road user. By Technolution chief scientist Dave Marples with Jason Barnes Even when taken individually, many of the developments going on and around vehiclebased mobility will bring about major changes in transportation. Taken collectively, the transformations we might expect are nothing short of profound. Enumeration of the influ