Automated sliding doors employ motion or optical sensors to initiate their motorized closing and opening functions. The sensors are positioned on top of the door that is automatic or embedded into the door framing from either the top or the side. The sensors employ microwave or infrared technology to detect motion. They are commonly employed in industrial and commercial environments to facilitate accessibility for both physically able as well as disabled individuals, for security and efficiency.
Motor Mechanism
The motion sensor or optical is wired to an electric main drive train which operates the clutch mechanism, which is attached to an cog wheel, or an auxiliary drive and door panels or panels. The auxiliary drive as well as the doors are connected via internal belts or cables, typically composed of rubber. They are used to control the opening and closing movements of the doors.
Tracks and Rollers
Automatic doors in Perth can be put up or installed in various methods based on the design of door or the application. A few are suspended over heads tracks (in the case of frame-less doors made of glass) and do not link to the floor plane, but instead skim over it they are in use. They can be fixed on the one side using tracks and rollers making connections to the floor plane in the case of a single sliding doors. Then they could be set in a frame of steel that has tracks, connections and rollers both on the floor and overhead planes.

