Cargo screeningNew cargo screening unveiled

Published 6 March 2012

Smiths Detection’s new HCVMe uses the power of a 4MeV X-ray accelerator and can scan loaded cargo containers with a steel penetration of 200 mm

Smiths Detection has unveiled a next-generation X-ray cargo scanner which the company says is smaller, more cost effective, and designed for easier operation in the field than traditional mobile systems.

The HCVMe, unlike standard radioactive source-based systems, uses the power of a 4MeV X-ray accelerator and can scan loaded cargo containers with a steel penetration of 200 mm (eight inches). HCVMe is also fuel-efficient, maneuverable, and light enough to be driven without any need for a U.S. Commercial Driver’s License (CDL).

Mal Maginnis, president of Smiths Detection, said: “With budgets cut and screening environments for customs and border police increasingly complex and limited in space, this system sets a new standard in every respect. It is the only one of its kind with no CDL required to drive or operate in the United States and its small footprint makes it the ideal for screening in city and other confined environments.”