Voting Unit DIGIVOTE® VD30 interactive
The wireless voting unit VD30 interactive is the successor of the proven
VD20 handheld and is based on 30 years of experience at BRÄHLER ICS in
the field of voting technology.
10 digit keys plus decimal and minus key allow any numeric data input,
not only to choose from given options. A CLEAR button works as backspace
or clears the entire input. Depending on the voting mode each input is
transmitted automatically or after confirming with the ENTER key. The
successful transmission can be visualized on the LC display if desired
(Acknowledge voting).
A backlit graphical LCD allows display of both numerical and
alphanumerical characters, readable in the dimmed conference environment
and in direct sunlight.
Proven radio technology
Radio transmission is done on proven 433 MHz ISM band. Five different
radio channels can be used. This enables the parallel operation of
multiple voting systems in directly adjacent rooms without any
interference.
Additionally, the DIGIVOTE system is largely immune to radio frequency
interference from WLAN, Bluetooth, mobile phones, etc., in our days
omnipresent in modern conference environment. A sealed membrane keyboard
protects the upside of the keypad against spilled conference drinks.
During a conference event, the voting units are permanently in
ready-to-receive mode. So that the correct function, the charge of
battery and reception status can be signaled to the PC application at
any time, as well as messages can be sent to an individual voting unit
or to all of them.
Because of their particular operating characteristics and differentiated
battery-saving modes a long standby time is guaranteed. An expansion
port connector allows the unit to be open to further applications like
independent storage of voting data.
The storage and charging case TK50-DVIII carries 50 VD30 voting units
and recharges all of them. Even there the units can respond to radio
communication, can be checked for rechargeable battery status and e.g be
set all at once to a different radio channel for the next event, which
is much more convinient rather than doing this individually one by one.