Skip to main content

Focus with Genetec’s AutoVu SharpV camera

Genetec’s newest AutoVu SharpV ALPR has motorised lenses with zoom and auto-focus.
By David Arminas August 26, 2021 Read time: 2 mins
Smile! Built-in illuminators, global shutter and high-resolution sensors provide crisp, accurate and greater than full high-definition images

Genetec says its new next generation AutoVu SharpV ALPR - automatic license plate recognition - camera can be deployed anywhere easily.

The SharpV ALPR camera features higher-resolution sensors, motorised lenses with auto-focus and machine learning-optimised processor to deliver high performance in the most demanding conditions.
 
The system is designed for fixed ALPR installations and can be up and running in minutes, thanks to multiple features like embedded 4G/LTE/ GPS and motorised lenses with zoom and auto-focus.

Genetec says the AutoVu SharpV ALPR camera is ideally suited for a range of applications, such as monitoring entries and exits, capturing license plates at high-speed on city streets and highways, managing off-street parking lots and facilities, as well as covering major city access points for wanted vehicles.

It has built-in illuminators, global shutter and high-resolution sensors that together provide crisp, accurate and greater than full high-definition images at all times day or night, in slow local traffic or on fast highways. The ultra-wide sensors can capture license plates across two lanes of traffic with no loss in accuracy meant that fewer devices are needed to cover more locations and so reduce total cost of ownership.

It features AutoVu MLC, a powerful onboard machine-learning based ALPR engine, that helps provide a full suite of advanced vehicle analytics that include vehicle classification, colour recognition, travel speed estimation and direction tracking. The onboard machine learning vision processing units – VPUs - also pave the way for new vehicle characteristics and behaviour analytics that will be introduced in the future.

"The new SharpV is easier to deploy, can cover a wider field of view, and provides more data about vehicle identification and behaviour," said Stephane Varin, product manager of AutoVu at Genetec.

The new version of AutoVu SharpV also greatly simplifies installation and maintenance. The motorised lenses enable zoom and auto-focus to be adjusted remotely at the time of installation and during routine maintenance. Embedded cellular networking equipment provides the ability to connect using 4G/LTE where it is available.

Genetec, based in Montreal, Canada, produces security, intelligence and operations systems. These include its premier product called Security Center, an open-architecture platform that unifies IP-based video surveillance, access control, automatic license plate recognition, communications and analytics.

Related Content

  • Leica Cyclone teams up with NCTech’s iSTAR camera database
    January 19, 2016
    Users of Leica Cyclone, a 3D point cloud processing software, can now automatically import and align high-dynamic range (HDR) data from NCTech’s iSTAR camera database. The result is enhanced images delivered faster and easier, according to both companies. “It is also the accuracy to which these images fit the 3D point cloud data that is paramount. NCTech’s iSTAR camera produces high-quality HDR imaging at the accuracy everyone expects,” said Faheem Khan, vice president, business development for Leica Geosys
  • Vitronic’s 90 POLISCAN for Maryland
    November 16, 2022
    Conduent Transportation, a provider of automated transportation solutions, will use Vitronic’s LIDAR-based speed enforcement technology to improve road safety in the US state of Maryland.
  • Vitronic’s 90 POLISCAN FM1 LIDAR for Maryland
    September 14, 2022
    Vitronic’s 90 POLISCAN FM1 systems offer both speed measurement and automatic license plate recognition in the US state of Maryland.
  • Growing WIM demand in Russia and South America
    April 4, 2014
    One Eastern European WIM manufacturer is finding commercial success in Russia, while another leading manufacturer is in demand in South America, as Guy Woodford reports Since Czech WIM technology manufacturer Camea secured type approval for its UnicamWIM system in early 2013, the firm has been installing a number of the systems in different Russian regions. These have included two UnicamWIM stations in Novosibirsk, one in the Kostroma region, and another on the M20 Highway between Belarus and Russia.