Skip to main content

Syndicate launches moisture-resistant solution for parking

Syndicate Secure Print says its new product – on show at Intertraffic – is just the ticket. It’s a new moisture-resistant ticket roll aimed at its global parking community customer base.
March 24, 2014 Read time: 1 min
7670 Syndicate Secure Print says its new product – on show at Intertraffic – is just the ticket. It’s a new moisture-resistant ticket roll aimed at its global parking community customer base.

The product can be used in most OEM Pay & Display systems and offers “the highest level of moisture protection”, the firm said at Intertraffic.

“This new product was specifically developed to meet the demands of high humidity locations around the globe,” said sales director Lee Minter.

“We already manufacture on a range of substrates developed with moisture-resistant properties, but this new product takes it to the next level.”

Syndicate supplies a range clients, including airports, management companies and private operators, in Europe, North America, Asia, Africa and the Middle East.
www.syndicategroup.net

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • CES 2023: NXP chip for ADAS & AVs
    January 6, 2023
    Radar one-chip family allows long-range detection/separation of small and larger objects
  • Keeping people on track is RATP’s raison d’etre
    June 14, 2018
    In Paris, RATP Group’s autonomous Metro Line 1 is carrying 750,000 people a day across the city. Ben Spencer is invited into the control room to take a look at how the system works Paris is visited by millions of tourists each year, keen to see for themselves stunning attractions such as the Eiffel Tower, Arc de Triomphe, Notre-Dame, the Louvre, the Seine and all the rest. But while the best-known sites of the City of Light tend to be on the surface, there is a lot going on below those iconic grand boule
  • Towards common standards for cooperative road infrastructures
    July 23, 2012
    Michael Noblett of Connexis discusses international progress towards common standards for cooperative road infrastructures. Will vehicle safety communications standards be able to support ITS on the international level, or will we settle once again for regional interoperability only? The answer lies in the current status of the draft standards themselves, and the requirements users and authorities are placing on the people who draft them.
  • In-vehicle safety standard released for consultation
    July 24, 2012
    The new ISO 26262 standard for safety-related vehicle systems is now available for comment. MIRA's David Ward talks to ITS International about what the standard will mean for vehicle and road safety in the future. The publication on 8 July this year of ISO 26262 as a Draft International Standard (DIS) marks an important progression for the automotive - and, in time, the cooperative infrastructure - industries. A couple of years from now, automotive OEMs will be able to subscribe to a unifying standard for s