Doktor Jons Guide to the "Use and Application of CCTV"
The "News and Views" Section - Manufacturers Press Release

So would you like to play "Spot the CCTV Camera?". Eagle eyed visitors may recognise the profusion of street furniture, surrounding a single heritage dome camera keeping watch over part  of Londons' prestigious Oxford Street shopping area.So would you like to play "Spot the CCTV Camera?". Eagle eyed visitors may recognise the profusion of street furniture, surrounding a single heritage dome camera keeping watch over part  of Londons' prestigious Oxford Street shopping area.

- Press Release - 15th December 2008

 

Forward Vision MIC1-series PTZ cameras ... keep crime ­ and vehicles ­ off the streets

 

Bristol is no different from any other major city in the UK in that it has to put up with its fair share of challenges, from inner-city crime through to congestion on its roads. In both cases, however, there is one product that is helping the City Council’s teams to stay one step ahead of the game, a product noted for its reliability and flexibility even in the most demanding environments: the MIC1, or ‘Metal Mickey’, series from Forward Vision, a member of the Bosch group.

Bristol City Council first started using MIC1 cameras eight years ago in a city centre surveillance role, after the technology was recommended by a local installer, Select Electrics. Select had installed the fibre network infrastructure across the city and was the Council’s principal contractor for the installation and maintenance of CCTV: “At the time, MIC1 cameras were seen as quite a radical design,” explains Select Electric’s managing director Ray Murphy, “and the Council needed to be convinced that it would give them the level of performance and reliability they needed. 

“It is a testimony to its quality that there are now more than 250 cameras from the MIC1 series  deployed in Bristol, not only for security but also in a traffic management capacity. On sites where other manufacturers’ technology is installed, these cameras are gradually being replaced with MIC1 cameras as budgets become available.”

Images from the cameras are transmitted to the City Council’s award-winning control room in the council offices. The facility is both CCTV User Group Gold accredited as well as having a national accreditation for social alarm monitoring ­ one of the few councils in the UK to be so recognised. It has recently been granted funding for a new monitoring wall and matrix system that will allow access to all council, traffic, police and retail CCTV systems.

In charge of the control room is manager Gordon McLanaghan: “We first trialled one of the cameras in 2000 and have never looked back,” he explains. “They give us a level of flexibility and reliability that we need, and are sufficiently robust to operate in a number of challenging environments. They are also ‘plug and play’ which is excellent from an installation and maintenance perspective, and if parts need to be replaced they can be changed with the minimum of downtime.”

The success of the cameras in a security surveillance capacity led the Council to look at MIC1 cameras for use in traffic management, managed through a dedicated urban traffic control room: “The cameras used across the city ­ whether for traffic management or city centre surveillance ­ can be viewed in either control room,” Gordon McLanaghan says. 

“Recently, my colleagues in traffic secured funding to increase the number of cameras deployed, and because they could access the cameras we have already installed, they were able to extend their scheme quite dramatically. I recommended they use MIC1 cameras and after a trial against a range of competitor technology, they agreed that the MIC1s offered greater performance and better value for money.” 

“The quality of images and the effectiveness of the zoom from each of the cameras is second to none,” Gordon McLanaghan adds, “but there are also other advantages. It is easy to configure Automatic Number Plate Recognition (ANPR) functionality, for example, on any of the cameras, which gives us tremendous flexibility, and their design makes them unobtrusive and aesthetically better looking. We are replacing the old ‘shoebox’ cameras with MIC1 cameras wherever we can as budgets become available. 

“The ‘Metal Mickey’ is in essence everything you could possibly want from a CCTV camera.” A further advantage is the use of brushless motor technology as Select Electrics’ Ray Murphy concludes: “The use of brushless motors further improves what is already a brilliant performance. The ‘Metal Mickey’ has effectively become the benchmark that every other manufacturer aspires to and with further investment now as part of the Bosch brand, the quality is likely to get better still.”

The latest MIC1 cameras to be installed in Bristol are units from the MIC1-400 aluminium and MIC1-400 infrared ranges. Both are rated to IP68 for the ultimate in environmental protection, come with a choice of 18x or 36x true day/night camera modules and offer extremely flexible mounting options. The MIC1-400 infrared range benefits from built in infrared illuminators providing over 55 metres of illumination at night.

- Ends -

Photo (above) reproduced by kind permission of Forward Vision - MIC1-400 camera in Bristol

About Bosch Group
The Bosch Group is a leading global supplier of technology and services. In the areas of automotive and industrial technology, consumer goods, and building technology, some 271,000 associates generated sales of 46.3 billion euros in fiscal 2007. The Bosch Group comprises Robert Bosch GmbH and its more than 300 subsidiaries and regional companies in roughly 50 countries. This worldwide development, manufacturing, and sales network is the foundation for further growth. Each year, Bosch spends more than 3 billion euros for research and development, and applies for over 3,000 patents worldwide. The company was set up in Stuttgart in 1886 by Robert Bosch (1861-1942) as “Workshop for Precision Mechanics and Electrical Engineering.” 

The special ownership structure of Robert Bosch GmbH guarantees the entrepreneurial freedom of the Bosch Group, making it possible for the company to plan over the long term and to undertake significant up-front investments in the safeguarding of its future. Ninety-two percent of the share capital of Robert Bosch GmbH is held by Robert Bosch Stiftung GmbH, a charitable foundation. The majority of voting rights are held by Robert Bosch Industrietreuhand KG, an industrial trust. The entrepreneurial ownership functions are carried out by the trust. The remaining shares are held by the Bosch family and by Robert Bosch GmbH.

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