IGT Industries have a long history of providing custom made MMI products to the Marine Industry. Their control panels are used by manufacturers of Dynamic Positioning (DP) and Bridge Navigational Watch Systems (BNWAS), Propulsion Control, Docking Systems and Communication Systems. Designed and manufactured in the UK all IGT products meet IEC 60945
With 25 Years of experience in all forms of MMI, IGT offer design, prototype and volume manufacture of custom made plug-in control panels. These may incorporate keyboard, touch screen and joystick control elements as well as displays and various Illumination options including the latest ‘Thin-Film’ Lighting Technology. IGT’s very latest Capacitive Touch Panels with optional back-lighting may also be incorporated.
Terry Moss, Sales and Marketing Manager at IGT Industries, comments; “IGT Industries is one of the UK’s longest established Human Machine Interface Solutions providers and we can offer our customers a high quality 'build to print' sub-assembly production service or a cost saving single source for complete control panel design and manufacture. Supplying a complete assembly simplifies our customers system integration, reduces complex testing and multi-vendor liaison in the event of any functional problems.”
These HMI products are suitable for use in Marine, Aviation, Railway, Medical, MIL, Industrial, Fire, Security, Telecom and many other electronic control system applications.
IGT Industries HMI assemblies may be specified for use in environmentally hostile conditions in military and industrial control applications, including use on ships and oil rigs. IGT control panels offer PS/2 USB compatibility, may be waterproof to IP67, RFI/EMC compliant and specified to meet approvals of Lloyds Register for Equipment used in shipping and American Bureau of Shipping. IGT Industries is also a signatory to 21st Century Supply Chains (SC-21).
• See IGT at Seawork International Commercial Marine Exhibition and Conference 2012 (Southampton GB 22/24 May 2012)
“Collaboration”
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I get a lot of emails and other messages offering to “Collaborate”.
Invariably the sender means “please pay me for my service”. In many cases,
what they ...
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