Skip to main content

Avery Dennison’s TrafficJet takes off

Avery Dennison’s TrafficJet is a reel-fed inkjet print system that uses dedicated eco-solvent inks matched to traffic sign colours. Featuring an eight-colour ink capacity, the TrafficJet is now capable of printing both reflective and Mutoh Eco Ultra CMYK inks. This allows signmakers to add customised graphics and colours. With appropriate overlaminates, it provides professional-grade signage for commercial applications.
May 9, 2016 Read time: 1 min

1540 Avery Dennison’s TrafficJet is a reel-fed inkjet print system that uses dedicated eco-solvent inks matched to traffic sign colours.

Featuring an eight-colour ink capacity, the TrafficJet is now capable of printing both reflective and Mutoh Eco Ultra CMYK inks. This allows signmakers to add customised graphics and colours. With appropriate overlaminates, it provides professional-grade signage for commercial applications.

Avery Dennison TrafficJet’s versatile production set-up enables signmakers to easily design and print a sign, apply a protective overlaminate, cut out the finished sign and apply it, all in a very short time. This delivers cost and time efficiencies without compromising quality.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • New aggregate plant for Sinoma Cement in China
    May 16, 2016
    Sinoma Cement is one of the largest cement manufacturers in the Peoples Republic of China. In 2012 the company decided to boost its aggregate production, both for its own use in cement production, and to supply aggregates to the local construction market. In order to do this Sinoma Cement invested in two aggregate plants supplied by Sandvik Construction, consisting of feeders, screens, jaw and impact crushers. The firm’s extensive production of clinker cement is facilitated through three production lines
  • Topcon machine control units take the heat off an Alaskan contractor
    December 4, 2015
    Juniper, spruce, cranberry, cottonwood and rose. Most people think of pine trees and berries amid beautiful country fields. But for one contractor based just below the Arctic Circle in the US state of Alaska, the names represent a successful job completed using machine control. Valley General Construction recently finished a US$350,000 contract for the upgrading of country roads in the local borough of Matanuska-Susitna. The colourful names belong to roads in a heavily wooded residential subdivision located
  • Major upgrade for Chicago O’Hare Airport
    August 14, 2015
    Internationally, airports are being upgraded and expanded to increase capacity and safety – Mike Woof writes. All around the world, airports are being expanded and upgraded, both to cope with massive increases in passenger numbers and also to handle larger aircraft. Runways have to be rebuilt with stronger structures and surfaces to handle greater air traffic volumes as well as increased loads from larger aeroplanes. Building airport runways, however, poses many challenges for construction crews. Paving qua
  • Customer Comes Full Circle with Komatsu iMC 2.0
    April 4, 2022
    In 2017, the Budorealizacja company from Myślenice, Poland started using the first ever Komatsu intelligent Machine Control (iMC) excavator to be delivered in the country. Over four years on, the company now owns 10 Komatsu iMC machines across both excavators and dozers, and significantly, its fleet was further expanded when they recently became the first Polish customer to take delivery of an iMC 2.0 version of the PC210LCi-11