Skip to main content

Tattile shows speed enforcement, launches next-generation ANPR

Leading Italian ITS company Tattile is being tight-lipped about a world launch it is planning for Intertraffic Amsterdam 2016. However, the company promises that the new camera range it has designed and developed from the ground up is genuinely next-generation.
February 29, 2016 Read time: 2 mins

Leading Italian ITS company 592 Tattile is being tight-lipped about a world launch it is planning for Intertraffic Amsterdam 2016. However, the company promises that the new camera range it has designed and developed from the ground up is genuinely next-generation.

“We are talking about a totally new ANPR range using technology that is revolutionary, not just for Tattile but for the whole sector,” says Tattile’s Massimiliano Cominelli. “To date, there are no cameras with the features and performance of what we will unveil at Intertraffic.”

Housed within a totally new, futuristic design that complements the current needs of urban design, the new ANPR camera range will feature a context picture plus night vision as well as advanced software for vehicle detection and classification. According to Cominelli, this latest innovation from Tattile has a wide range of applications from parking to free-flow tolling and enforcement.

Tattile says the world launch of the new range will take place on its stand at Intertraffic on the opening day of the event, 5 April, at 10.00am.

The company will also be showing the Vega Speed, the innovative new speed enforcement camera Tattile launched just a few months ago. Its main application areas are Instant Speed Enforcement and Average Speed Enforcement. In addition to being so light and compact, a key feature of the device is the level of integration that has been achieved.

Related Content

  • ASECAP widens its influence and fosters debate in Dubrovnik
    August 5, 2013
    Jason Barnes reports from the ASECAP Days 2013 event, which took place in Dubrovnik. ASECAP, the European tolling association held its 41st annual Study and Information Days event in Dubrovnik, Croatia, which attracted more than 200 figures from the road infrastructure sector in Europe and beyond. A series of presentations over two days brought attendees up to date with developments in a variety of policy and technology fields and discussed a number of developing and new topics, such as GNSS-based tolling a
  • Mounting benefits of dynamic tolling project
    January 30, 2012
    Wisconsin's four-year HOT lanes pilot project, launched in May 2008, cost US$18.8 million to construct. Halfway into the project, which uses variably priced, or dynamic, tolling to improve highway efficiency, the benefits are mounting. The problem was obvious, and frustrating, to anyone who ever sat in bumper-to-bumper traffic on State Route 167 and watched a lone car whiz by every 20 seconds or so in the carpool lane. But for planners at the Washington State Department of Transportation, the conundrum was
  • Traffic management is increasingly image conscious
    January 27, 2025
    At the Vision show in Stuttgart, Germany, a wide variety of traffic-related solutions were on display. Adam Hill takes the temperature of the industry…
  • On-road and in-vehicle are not in competition
    May 18, 2018
    The integrity and accuracy of data that can be verified by weigh-in-motion technology has been improving for decades – and the range of WIM applications is increasing at a tremendous pace. Chris Koniditsiotis, president of the International Society for Weigh-in-Motion (ISWIM) and CEO of Transport Certification Australia (TCA), began his career in 1985 as a pavements engineer. “When I joined this portfolio, the integrity, accuracy, and sampling frequency of mass information delivered at best an estimate, us