Skip to main content

Kria shows T-Exspeed, T-Xroad and T-ID products

Italy-headquartered Kria is here at Intertraffic with a stand packed with new designs for the company's T-Exspeed, T-Xroad and T-ID line of products.
April 5, 2016 Read time: 2 mins
Stefano Arrighetti (left) and André Antunes of Kria
Italy-headquartered 83 Kria is here at Intertraffic with a stand packed with new designs for the company's T-Exspeed, T-Xroad and T-ID line of products.


“Our 3D machine vision technology has so far been deployed for more than a decade all around the world, meeting many different applications, both fixed and mobile, and harsh installation and operation conditions,” says Stefano Arrighetti, Kria’s CEO and founder and the main driving force behind the company’s multiple ground-breaking products. “This mature and adaptive nature has translated to very positive feedback and repeating customers,” he said.

“We have been applying a lot of improvements stemming from the mobile world and have reduced the processing unit so much that it has now been integrated into the main camera housing, making for very sleek units. We still maintain modularity, though; our customers can still place the CPU elsewhere if the project so demands,” Arrighetti added.

One of the new releases is also Kria’s new ‘Transparentizer feature’, allowing face recognition-grade images from units such as the all-in-one T-Exspeed.

“T-Exspeed is our flagship product: it incorporates enforcement, security intelligence and infomobility capabilities,” says André Antunes, who handles International Sales at Kria. “This new feature is critical to meet with demands from the security market, responding to increasing needs for intelligence information from these systems.”

Kria is also keen on seeing new interest from upcoming enforcement applications such as WIM (weigh-in-motion), where the company says it can substantially help with speed variation and trajectory enforcement over weight sensor areas to radically improve the number of correct detections.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Daimler’s double take sees machine vision move in-vehicle
    December 13, 2013
    Jason Barnes looks at Daimler’s Intelligent Drive programme to consider how machine vision has advanced the state of the art of vision-based in-vehicle systems. Traditionally, radar was the in-vehicle Driver Assistance System (DAS) technology of choice, particularly for applications such as adaptive cruise control and pre-crash warning generation. Although vision-based technology has made greater inroads more recently, it is not a case of ‘one sensor wins’. Radar and vision are complementary and redundancy
  • Venkat Sumantran: ‘Smart cities are more hype than reality’
    November 23, 2018
    For all the talk of smart cities, investment in systems lags significantly behind organic expansion in most places. Andrew Stone talks to Venkat Sumantran, who has been looking at how to create a coherent framework which could help authorities answer multiple mobility questions Two megatrends are posing unprecedented challenges to those trying to keep people moving around the world’s urban areas now - and in the years and decades to come. The first is rapid urbanisation. One in six of us lived in urban a
  • Intercomp weighs in at Hamburg
    October 13, 2021
    The hiatus of in-person events has not slowed down product development and certification of scales and sensors for US-based Intercomp. The manufacturer's of fixed and portable scales and sensors incorporate strain gauge technology, which enables accurate, stable, and reliable measurements via wheel and axle weighing applications. These scales and sensors for static and Weigh in Motion (WIM) applications are on display in Hamburg
  • Feiring Bruk reports 88% reduction in fines with CDE plant
    August 16, 2019
    Family-owned business Feiring Bruk, which operates primarily in eastern Norway where it has 10 sites extracting and producing crushed stone, gravel and asphalt, has announced an 88% reduction in fines as a result of its wet processing plant commissioned with CDE.