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

  • Innovations in machine control deliver efficiency
    November 9, 2020
    How far has machine control technology come and what does the future hold?
  • Slurry in-control
    February 28, 2012
    The innovative EZ-OP Monitoring system from Valley Slurry Seals (VSS) is said to help boost productivity for slurry seal and micro-surfacing crews. The unit can be fitted to the firm's well-proven Macropaver 12B model to boost performance.
  • Smart road test facility in Virginia
    July 28, 2015
    A test stretch of road in the US is playing a valuable role in developing technology and boosting traffic safety -*Tom Gibson writes Located a short distance from the Virginia Tech campus in the mountains of rural southwest Virginia in the mid-Atlantic region of United States, the Virginia Smart Road looks like a conventional road. But venturing to either end of the 3.5km-long thoroughfare reveals that it actually goes nowhere, at least for now. The result of a plan conceived back in the 1980s, the Vi
  • Soil compaction efficiency is improving
    June 2, 2020
    The latest machines offers gains in soil compaction efficiency