InnoTrans 2024

Symeo to exhibit at InnoTrans 2024

Symeo will be an exhibitor at the InnoTrans trade fair being held September 24 to 27 in Berlin. At booth 785 in hall 27 of the international trade fair for transport technology, Symeo will use a demonstrator to show how reliably its industrial radar sensors operate even under the most adverse conditions. At the center of the exhibit will be the company’s HD Imaging Radar concept, for which development and application partners are being sought.

The HD Imaging Radar technology developed by Symeo combines the reliability of radar sensors with the high resolution of laser scanners. The system is now ready for use in real-life applications, with the monitoring of rail installations and their surroundings being one of the main use cases for which HD Imaging Radar was developed. As a sensor array on rail vehicles, HD Imaging Radar has the potential to revolutionize track monitoring.  Each train that is equipped with HD Imaging Radar would collect detailed data on the track environment as it passes by. In conjunction with intelligent data analysis – using artificial intelligence, for example – the radar system would become a virtual track inspector with the ability to quickly detect damage and suspicious activities in the track environment. 

Additionally, Symeo will exhibit the following products: 

  • LPR-1DHP-291 for precise real-time distance measurement up to 50 meters with a single sensor and up to 500 meters with multiple sensors.
  • LPR-1DHP-350 as a replacement for ultrasonic and laser sensors. Measuring only 90 × 90 × 35 millimeters, it can be installed where no other radar system would fit.
  • LPR-1D24 for measuring distances of up to 1,000 meters, collision avoidance, and reliable positioning in seaports, container terminals, bulk storage facilities, and steel mills.
     

InnoTrans presentation with Thomas Hörl-Weinhold, VP Industry Business Development at Symeo

InnoTrans trade fair highlight: HD imaging radar combines the reliability of radar sensors with the high resolution of laser scanners. Installed as a sensor array on rail vehicles, it has the potential to revolutionize the monitoring of railway tracks.