Skip to main content

Swarco demonstrates full-colour LED VMS technology

Visitors to the Swarco stand 10.103 are confronted with the very latest development in LED variable message signs. The new fully graphic, full-colour LED VMS by Austrian signalling specialist Swarco Futurit is not only able to display the usual signs, but is also suitable to show images and moving pictures, almost in TV quality.
March 24, 2014 Read time: 2 mins
Visitors to the 129 Swarco stand 10.103 are confronted with the very latest development in LED variable message signs. The new fully graphic, full-colour LED VMS by Austrian signalling specialist Swarco Futurit is not only able to display the usual signs, but is also suitable to show images and moving pictures, almost in TV quality.

The product shown in Amsterdam has around 10m2 of display surface. A sister VMS with 24.5m2 has been installed in the Stockholm Norra Länken tunnel where it is part of an art project to make driving in the tunnel less monotonous.

Futurit product manager Wolfgang Ernst provides the impressive details of the VMS: “The approximate 3x4m-sized VMS works with a pixel pitch of 20mm and uses 24,576 lenses with a brilliant light output provided by a total of 73,728 LEDs.“  Due to Swarco’s ACHILLES technology (Advanced Controller for Highly Integrated Long Lasting Economical Signs), the VMS has an astonishingly low power consumption of typically 280W. Even if all LEDs of the matrix are switched on in white, the consumption will not exceed 1,300W, which is less power than is normally required to operate a vacuum cleaner.

As Swarco points out, this is further proof of the company’s competence in not only providing displays with excellent optical qualities, but also helping highway authorities to reduce the pressure on their budgets to operate traffic infrastructure. Additionally, the very low energy needs prolong the life of the LEDs and in the long run will minimise the total cost of ownership of such VMS.
%$Linker: 2 Asset <?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-16"?><dictionary /> 4 12648 0 oLinkExternal www.swarco.com Visit Swarco Website false /EasySiteWeb/GatewayLink.aspx?alId=12648 false false%>

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Finland leads the MaaS debate at London conference
    February 20, 2017
    Finland’s revolutionary attempts to change how public transport is provided, funded and managed will be top of the agenda at a ground-breaking mobility as a service (MaaS) conference in London on 22 and 23 March. The MaaS Market – Concept to Reality conference will feature keynote presentations from Anne Berner, Finland’s forward-thinking Minister of Transport, and Sampo Hietanen, CEO of MaaS Global. MaaS exploits developing technologies to allow populations to plan and buy all-inclusive transportat
  • ISS and CitySync showcase ANPR solutions at World Congress
    September 26, 2012
    ISS Europe and CitySync, specialists in detection and ANPR solutions for the ITS market, will use the ITS World Congress to showcase the Jet-Aludra which incorporates an IR ANPR camera, colour overview camera and an on-board processor. This cost effective Intelligent ANPR camera processes images at the time of capture, so smaller packets of information can be transferred via wireless 3G or wired connections to a central server for review or directly to a police back office facility, matching against hotlist
  • Easylux shows new Autonomous Mini retroreflectometer
    March 20, 2018
    A breakthrough in the size and capabilities of retroreflectometers is being claimed by Brazilian company Easylux with its new Autonomous Mini model. Retroreflectometers have been shrinking steadily over the decades, and a current model usually weighs about 8-10kg. However, Easylux’s model cuts the size and weight of the devices to just 2kg – “completely impossible to imagine two or three years ago”, said company founder Eng. Gustavo Felipe Paolillo. The new model is battery-powered and, once laid on a highw
  • Easylux shows new Autonomous Mini retroreflectometer
    March 20, 2018
    A breakthrough in the size and capabilities of retroreflectometers is being claimed by Brazilian company Easylux with its new Autonomous Mini model. Retroreflectometers have been shrinking steadily over the decades, and a current model usually weighs about 8-10kg. However, Easylux’s model cuts the size and weight of the devices to just 2kg – “completely impossible to imagine two or three years ago”, said company founder Eng. Gustavo Felipe Paolillo. The new model is battery-powered and, once laid on a highw