Skip to main content

Controls highlights automatic lab

Controls says that the continuous search for new technological solutions has led Wykeham Farrance to an important threshold which shows how well-directed research investment can result in technological successes both in terms of quality and price.
February 6, 2012 Read time: 2 mins
A flow diagram of the automated Autotriax system from Controls' Wykeham Farrance division
2139 Controls says that the continuous search for new technological solutions has led Wykeham Farrance to an important threshold which shows how well-directed research investment can result in technological successes both in terms of quality and price.

"Wykeham Farrance, the Soil Mechanics Division of Italian materials testing equipment manufacturer, Controls, has always worked closely with universities and research centres in sharing ideas and developing technologies that can be industrialised in the field of stringent quality control and reliability, which are now well recognised as the basis for successful development," says Controls.

Among the pioneers in the application of automation for geotechnical apparatus, Wykeham Farrance's automatic equipment is said to allow full compliance with international standards; the exclusion of user errors and to avoid discrepancies due to non-calibrated instruments or testing interruptions at the end of the working day.

"Above all, laboratory productivity is highly increased with a consequent reduction of costs," says Controls, which was highlighting this automation at the Geofluid Exhibition and Conference in Piacenza, Italy (6-9 October, 2010).

Among products are Shearmatic (for direct/residual shear tests); Autotriax (static triaxial tests, effective stress, stress path, permeability and unsaturated soil testing), and Dynatriax (dynamic triaxial testing and a combined resonant column/cyclic torsional shear apparatus).

"These allow the user to set all the test parameters beforehand.

Dynatriax, the automatic dynamic triaxial system, represents the new generation of dynamic systems.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • GPS machine control systems reduce survey time
    February 14, 2012
    Innovative uses are being made of GPS technology, Mike Woof reports. US firms Creighton Manning Engineering and Delaney Construction have made a novel use of GPS technology in a project for the Route 85 Slingerlands bypass extension in the US.
  • Promoting advances in sustainable roads worldwide
    February 8, 2012
    The International Road Federation (IRF), founded in 1948, is the only world forum advocating better and safer roads through better road design and construction bearing in mind the user. It is a unique institution that brings together members active in road infrastructure from both the private and public sectors.
  • Promoting advances in sustainable roads worldwide
    April 12, 2012
    Professor Martin Snaith, O.B.E., introduces an annual gathering that has grown over the years to become perhaps the world's foremost professional development forum promoting advances in sustainable roads worldwide. Over more than 15 years the Senior Road Executives Programme (SRE), organised by the internationally renowned Highways Group of the University of Birmingham, UK, in association with IRF, has established a worldwide reputation for providing top-quality professional development for executives worki
  • Planning the world's rural transport systems
    February 8, 2012
    China Hosts Major International Convention on Rural Roads. Given the crucial importance of rural roads in the global development context, IRF is according the issue priority focus this year by co-hosting its 2nd International Convention on Rural Roads. This will be convened in Jinan City, Shandong, China, from 26-29 October 2010, in association with the global Transport Knowledge Partnership (gTKP) and the China Highway and Transportation Society (CHTS). Following the landmark success of the inaugural IRF g