Skip to main content

OmniAir to design certification program for non-Kapsch readers and tags

The E-ZPass Group is to work with OmniAir Certification Services (OCS) to specify a testing program for ensuring full compliance of competitive equipment with E-ZPass readers and tags. OCS was hired by the E-ZPass Group for fees of around US$50,000 to detail the testing needed. The documents are due to be completed by the end of the year. Actual testing for certification will be negotiated by manufacturers with OCS-accredited testing firms. The move to certify additional suppliers’ equipment follows K
December 4, 2013 Read time: 3 mins
The 4981 E-ZPass Group is to work with 808 OmniAir Certification Services (OCS) to specify a testing program for ensuring full compliance of competitive equipment with E-ZPass readers and tags. OCS was hired by the E-ZPass Group for fees of around US$50,000 to detail the testing needed. The documents are due to be completed by the end of the year.

Actual testing for certification will be negotiated by manufacturers with OCS-accredited testing firms.

The move to certify additional suppliers’ equipment follows 81 Kapsch’s decision to forgo intellectual property rights to the E-ZPass core and is seen as a follow-up towards interoperability and competition. The E-ZPass Group announcement says the certification program “leads to improved competition, and potential for reduced costs.”

Suzanne Murtha, chief executive of OmniAir comments: "Using independently evaluated testing techniques that have industry support and consensus is key to the continued improvement of efficiency in tolling and transportation systems."

Full members of the E-ZPass Group are contractually bound to buy exclusively from Kapsch for five years from the summer of 2011 through to July 2016, following the competitive procurement E-ZPass conducted in the years 2007 to 2011. That takes them through to July 2016.

E-ZPass Group executive director P J Wilkins says it is coincidence that the exclusivity of the Kapsch contract expires around the same time as the industry's target date for full national interoperability. Meanwhile, he says non-full members of the Group will be assisted to buy E-ZPass compatible equipment in a competitive setting.

He said: "This effort will ensure that equipment used by toll agencies is compatible with our own, and we can be confident that it will perform at the high level expected by our customers."

He says the certification process is a “very important” step toward national interoperability and a competitive market in compatible electronic toll equipment. He said it fits in with the work of the IBTTA-led committee on national interoperability because it will help instil confidence among toll operators that manufacturers’ claims of E-ZPass compatibility are valid.

He said the E-ZPass Group was following the model developed by the 6C Users Group, but with an add-on: “Not only does the equipment have to work. We are also laying out performance standards to be tested to and certified.”  A key performance standard lays out the required minimum accurate reads per thousand passes of the gantry in a typical traffic stream. Tests are done with ranges of speed from stop and go to over speed limits at which specified accuracy rates must be obtained.

According to Wilkins, the 63 IBTTA-led interoperability effort is very close to having an agreed list of protocols that need to be built into multi-protocol (MP) readers. At least three suppliers (Kapsch, 139 Transcore, and 4080 3M) have MP readers, and there may be others. But they will need to be tested and certified to work well enough with the list of chosen protocols.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Kapsch wins Texas tolling projects
    July 31, 2012
    Kapsch TrafficCom IVHS, a subsidiary of Kapsch TrafficCom, has been selected to design, build, and integrate the managed lane system (MLS) for both the North Tarrant Express (NTE) and LBJ Express projects in Dallas and Tarrant Counties in North Texas.
  • Advanced Driver Assistance Systems: a solution or another problem?
    November 27, 2013
    Do Advanced Driver Assistance Systems represent a positive step forward for safety, or something of a safety risk? Jason Barnes discusses the issue with leading industry figures. Advanced Driver Assistance Systems (ADAS) are already common. Anti-lock brakes or electronic stability control are well understood and are either fitted as standard or frequently requested by new vehicle buyers. More advanced ADAS features are appearing on many top-end vehicles and the trickle-down has already started. Adaptive
  • Pilot scheme tests automatic emergency call system
    March 14, 2012
    Development of the European eCall system is now at a stage of national systems testing. Ertico’s project manager for the HeERO pilot scheme Andy Rooke has given ITS International the lowdown on progress towards pan-European eCall services. Live testing is now under way in the nine countries participating in the European Commission’s HeERO project – a three year pilot scheme preparing the way for full deployment of Europe’s eCall automatic emergency call system.
  • TagMaster to supply UHF RFID readers to Sweden’s Trafikverket
    September 14, 2012
    TagMaster, Swedish producer of advanced RFID solutions for railway applications, has received additional orders for the XT-3HD long-range RFID reader from Trafikverket (the Swedish Rail Administration), following successful field testing. The RFID readers are to be installed as part of Trafikverket’s nationwide system for tracking railway goods wagons on the main Swedish rail network. The XT-3HD long-range RFID reader is the heavy-duty model of TagMaster’s XT-series of UHF readers and is fully EPC Gen 2 (IS