Skip to main content

Measurement Specialities’ Roadtrax BL sensor keeps rolling

In an industry that prides itself on continual innovation, Measurement Specialities is at Intertraffic quietly celebrating 25 years of its hugely successful Roadtrax BL piezoelectric axle sensor. Installed in 65 countries across six continents, the sensor continues to enjoy sales growth of nearly 10% a year and the firm’s team see no reason why the product won’t have another 25 years life in it. “While our main markets are countries in the developed world, we are seeing a lot of applications in the devel
March 24, 2014 Read time: 2 mins
Richard Brown of Measurement Specialties
In an industry that prides itself on continual innovation, 2205 Measurement Specialities is at Intertraffic quietly celebrating 25 years of its hugely successful Roadtrax BL piezoelectric axle sensor.

Installed in 65 countries across six continents, the sensor continues to enjoy sales growth of nearly 10% a year and the firm’s team see no reason why the product won’t have another 25 years life in it.

“While our main markets are countries in the developed world, we are seeing a lot of applications in the developing world,” Measurement Specialities piezo product line manager Don Halvorsen said at Intertraffic yesterday.

“Where you get World Bank-sponsored roads, they will specify weigh-in-motion sensors to monitor road use and enforce restrictions. These kind of investors want to protect their investment and ensure that a road lives up to its design life.”

Besides weigh-in-motion, applications for the sensors include speed and traffic light enforcement, high speed toll booths and counting and classifying.

Halvorsen said that the sensor’s key selling points included reliability and the low cost of installation compared to rival systems.

“You are cutting only a 20mm by 40mm slot in the road,” he said. “We have done a four-lane highway in just eight hours.”

Measurement Specialities has been a regular exhibitor at Intertraffic since 1986.

“We use the show for two main things: to see existing customers and reinforce existing relationships and to make sure we get to meet new potential customers,” said Halvorsen.
%$Linker: 2 Asset <?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-16"?><dictionary /> 4 48434 0 oLinkExternal www.Meas-Spec.com Measurement Specialities web false /EasySiteWeb/GatewayLink.aspx?alId=48434 false false%>

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Noptel introduces speed and classification lasers
    September 9, 2014
    Those wanting to catch up on the latest laser technology should drop by the Noptel booth where the company is highlighting its Speeder X1 and CMP52 laser radars. Speeder X1 is designed for vehicle speed measurement and has two integrated narrow angle laser transmitters allowing measurement of two consecutive overlapping speed profiles from the vehicle. Analysis of the profiles provides the speed, length and height of the vehicle as well as the time and distance to the vehicle in front. With its high
  • Toyota demos its Cooperative ITS technologies in Detroit
    September 7, 2014
    Toyota is giving attendees at the 2014 ITS World Congress a preview of its Cooperative ITS initiative, an effort to build automated driving technology that notifies drivers of real-time information captured through communications between vehicles and with sensors installed on roadways.
  • SVS-Vistek launches new 12MP camera range
    March 26, 2014
    Product enhancement and new launches feature on the SVS-Vistek stand. The company’s Tracer series of cameras now features better heat management a customer-requested improvements to casings’ screw fixings. But alongside improvements sits something wholly new – the SVCam-evo 12040. This is a CMOS-based camera, available in 12MP versions, which offers capabilities – high blooming suppression, low image lag and dynamic range – which matches those of CCD-based rivals, said the company’s Roland Maier.
  • Telespazio heralds increased use of EGNOS technology to track dangerous goods
    October 24, 2012
    Italy’s largest industrial company, oil and gas giant ENI, has asked all its third-party transport operators to use the new EGNOS system, which allows more accurate tracking of dangerous goods in transit. Satellite-based EGNOS improves the accuracy of existing GPS tracking systems, giving a vehicle’s position to an accuracy of one metre, compared to around four metres by GPS alone, said Telespazio’s Antonello Di Fazio at the World Congress yesterday. EGNOS can be installed via an overnight software upload.