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TSA To Evaluate New Personal Electronic Device Screening Technology

Seen As Potential Alternative To The Electronics Ban

The TSA will evaluate a new personal electronics scanner developed by One Resonance Sensors (ORS) as a potential alternative to President Trump's proposed ban on large consumer electronic devices in the cabins of aircraft from certain countries.

The company says its MobiLab ES is "the only state-of-the-art inspection system that effectively screens devices such as tablets and notebooks, which are currently banned from being carried onboard by passengers on a number of flights to the United States." In contrast to CT and other X-ray technologies, MobiLab ES is an affordable solution that may be deployed for at-gate or checkpoint electronics inspection.

On March 21, 2017, the U.S. Department of Homeland Security imposed new restrictions on electronics in aircraft cabins on direct flights to the United States from a number of North African and Middle Eastern airports. Recent reports indicate that an expansion of the ban may be extended to flights from European airports and other regions potentially impacting thousands of flights a week.

"We are pleased to have ORS' MobiLab ES assessed by the TSA as a potential solution for screening of electronics and to deliver a new, more compact, and less costly security capability to airports and air carriers to address threats to transportation security," said ORS Chief Executive Officer Pablo Prado. "MobiLab ES was designed specifically to address the threat of explosives concealed in portable electronic devices. We are confident that the scanner will demonstrate its effective and rapid detection capabilities and its mission-critical utility in security checkpoints."

ORS' MobiLab ES uses harmless radio-frequency electromagnetic waves to inspect electronic devices for concealed threats. The U.S. Department of Homeland Security and the U.K. Department for Transportation have evaluated the performance of the scanner, and trials have been performed at two airports in the Middle East.

(Image provided with One Resonance Sensors news release)

FMI: detect-ors.com

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