Skip to main content

Slovenian police get smart with truckers

Writing in the newsletter of TISPOL, an organisation established by the traffic police forces of Europe to improve road safety and law enforcement on the roads of Europe, Danijel Kumberger, National Traffic Police Unit, Slovenia, has revealed how smart the force has had to become to catch law-breaking truckers. As he points out, with automotive technical progress, it is vital to keep in touch with innovation because in modern vehicles, it is all about electronics, data sharing and processing of all kinds of
March 22, 2012 Read time: 3 mins
Writing in the newsletter of 650 TISPOL, an organisation established by the traffic police forces of Europe to improve road safety and law enforcement on the roads of Europe, Danijel Kumberger, National Traffic Police Unit, Slovenia, has revealed how smart the force has had to become to catch law-breaking truckers.

As he points out, with automotive technical progress, it is vital to keep in touch with innovation because in modern vehicles, it is all about electronics, data sharing and processing of all kinds of signals coming from almost every part of the vehicle. The signals are connected to a central computer unit on the vehicle that regulates, corrects, notices and reports if something is wrong or in conflict. All the actions of a vehicle’s components are monitored and errors are consequentially recorded when something is not functioning as it should.

Many of the conflicts are non-intended consequences when drivers or mechanics try to manipulate a vehicle part. Usually they chip-tune the engines to produce more power, boost the suspension to carry more load, and most commonly they try to manipulate the tachograph, to drive more and rest for less time.

Tachograph manipulations were very difficult to discover until now, Kumberger reports. However, today all vehicle ‘malfunctions’ are somehow visible to the on-board computer system and have an effect on other parts of the vehicle. For instance, when the tachograph is manipulated or not working properly, it automatically comes in conflict with other systems in vehicle, which still provide active signals because of the vehicle’s movement. All such conflicts are stored in the vehicle’s computer and in many cases, they have a timestamp.

Police Officers from Slovenia’s National Traffic Control Unit are very aware of that fact. Therefore they have started to use special equipment to monitor the entire electronic automotive architecture of vehicles that seem suspicious. In most cases, they have discovered many system errors, and when timestamps are checked, they mostly occur in late evenings or at nights when drivers are allegedly stationary ‘on daily rest’.

“Trucks should not have problems when they are parked and drivers are sleeping, thus the more plausible option is that the vehicle was on the move, while some of its systems were temporarily disabled. When we connect our diagnostic computer to the truck’s onboard diagnostic system, it all becomes very easy to explain and drivers suddenly become very co-operative,” says Danijel Kumberger. “They then have to face the fact that nothing can stay hidden and that their own truck has already told us all about their activities.”

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • C-ITS in Europe: It’s the governance, stupid!
    March 3, 2023
    Cooperative ITS (C-ITS) is coming – in fact, it’s already here. But who has responsibility for making it work? Richard Lax of Kapsch TrafficCom thinks there are lessons to be learned from the European experience
  • Demand-responsive transport keeps things flexible
    July 20, 2023
    Mobility needs change: Elena Ziller of OpenMove explains why demand-responsive transport is emerging as a hot mobility trend – and why it’s not without challenges
  • Getting C/AVs from pipedream to reality
    October 17, 2019
    The UK government has suggested that driverless cars could be on the roads by 2021. But designers and engineers are grappling with a number of difficult issues, muses Chris Hayhurst of MathWorks Earlier this year, the UK government made the bold statement that by 2021, driverless cars will be on the UK’s roads. But is this an achievable reality? Driverless technology already has its use cases on our roads, with levels of autonomy ranked on a scale. At one end of the spectrum, level 1 is defined by th
  • Asecap Days 2025: 'Vision Zero is not a number, it’s about a culture'
    May 29, 2025
    Saving lives and saving road infrastructure were two of the topics at the second and last day of the annual conference of Asecap, the European road tolling association, in Spanish capital Madrid