Skip to main content

Lindsay offers improved safety with its new X-LITE end terminal

Improved safety levels are claimed for the new end terminal developed by Lindsay. The X-Lite Terminal is said to offer excellent impact performance at an affordable price, as well as ease of installation. The product has been tested to NCHRP 350 TL-3 requirements and the firm is said to have been engineered for maximum interchangability for either flared or tangential installations. The unit is offered with heights of 710mm or 790mm, measures 11.43m long and features a W-beam design, which telescopes during
March 25, 2014 Read time: 2 mins
Scott Marion from Lindsay with the new Lindsay X-Lite end terminal
Improved safety levels are claimed for the new end terminal developed by 7613 Lindsay. The X-Lite Terminal is said to offer excellent impact performance at an affordable price, as well as ease of installation.

The product has been tested to NCHRP 350 TL-3 requirements and the firm is said to have been engineered for maximum interchangability for either flared or tangential installations. The unit is offered with heights of 710mm or 790mm, measures 11.43m long and features a W-beam design, which telescopes during impact.

It is made from many standard, non-proprietary W-beam guardrail components, which helps reduce the cost and has a non-extruding, fixed head design that is said to offer both safe and consistent performance.

The firm offers the product with a choice of I-Beam steel posts with either wood or composite blockouts, depending on needs of the client and the application. The company has designed the system for versatility and it can be attached to a concrete barrier by using standard transition components. It is suited for use at the side of a road where a recommended clear zone and recoverable slope can be attained.
%$Linker: 2 Asset <?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-16"?><dictionary /> 4 49576 0 oLinkExternal www.barriersystemsinc.com Visit Lindsay Website false /EasySiteWeb/GatewayLink.aspx?alId=49576 false false%>

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Q-Free showcases expanded transport management, tolling, ANPR portfolio
    August 11, 2014
    As visitors to the Q-Free booth at the ITS World Congress Detroit will see, the company has transformed its portfolio, shifting from a predominant focus on tolling to cover all aspects of road operations – financing, condition monitoring, real-time management and emerging cooperative ITS applications. With the event being staged in Detroit, it provides Q-Free with an opportunity to highlight its appreciable presence in the North American market. Recently it acquired Open Roads Consulting, a specialist i
  • Streetline heads for first European deployment of smart parking technology
    October 23, 2012
    Streetline’s smart parking technology, which is already well established in the US in cities such as Los Angeles, Indianapolis and Washington, DC, is about to achieve its first European deployment, in the German city of Braunschweig. This follows the announcement earlier this year that Streetline and Siemens had entered into a strategic partnership to offer integrated parking solutions to municipalities around the globe. Streetline’s sensor technology sits in the road surface and provides real-time informat
  • Q-Free focuses on all aspects on road operations
    September 7, 2014
    As visitors to the Q-Free booth at the ITS World Congress Detroit will see, the company has transformed its portfolio, shifting from a predominant focus on tolling to cover all aspects of road operations – financing, condition monitoring, real-time management and emerging cooperative ITS applications.
  • Wavetronix introduces Click 650 at ITS World Congress
    September 7, 2014
    This morning Wavetronix will use the ITS World Congress Detroit to introduce a new traffic cabinet interface device that brings the accuracy and reliability of its SmartSensor radar traffic detectors directly to intersection signal controllers. The Click 650 provides up to 64 channels of data and effectively replaces up to 16 four-channel or 32 two-channel rack cards with a small box that occupies much less space.