06-09-2014, 02:22 PM
(28-07-2014, 09:02 AM)thm Wrote:(26-07-2014, 03:23 PM)rosierabbit Wrote: By selecting the correct size saftey edge compliance should be achievable. Or fit eg bea LZR and then there's no need to force test, deep pockets required though.
Yes, that "impossible" of mine may have been an exaggeration...
BEA LZR is indeed a very, very cool piece of gear. Do you know if any model of it (I should think the LZR-P110) is accepted as a EN-12453 / type D safety device? Any reference? (just out of curiosity)
Links for the benefit of other readers of this thread:
BEA LZR-P110:
http://www.bea-pedestrian.be/en/products...zr-p110/#5
BEA LZR-i100:
http://www.bea-industrial.be/en/products...zr-i100/#6
BEA LZR-i110:
http://www.bea-industrial.be/en/products...zr-i110/#6
The Sensorio versions:
http://www.sensorio.be/en/products/product-range/
Hi sorry for a late reply. Yes these are accepted and have used a few on large properties that don't want safety edges on there nice million year old 100 tonne gate ?. As for a reference for its compliance I got mine from
CAME. Brilliant as all you do is align lasers from it onto each corner of the gate and then cut out with eg a flat piece of cardboard the area you want it to detect. From then you can't go within about 300mm (depending what u set it at) without it triggering the saftey. On a 2 leaf gate you require 4 of them! But so easy to install, look brilliant and work a treat, especially as you can have a push to exit button which you can't see as it's projected on to the wall. Just put a small mark on a brick of the wall and the client just touches the brick and off they go.....hate getting excited about gates, almost as much as my wife does ☺️
Cheers