Skip to main content

Drive C2X tests ITS systems in Finland’s demanding weather conditions

The VTT Technical Research Centre in Finland is involved in an extensive international Drive C2X project that tests and develops intelligent transport solutions, aimed at improving safety and efficiency in road traffic and reducing the carbon footprint of motoring. The project includes large-scale testing of inter-vehicle communication and communication between vehicles and the roadside infrastructure system. The tests are being carried out using cars from Mercedes-Benz, Opel and Volvo in slippery and deman
December 17, 2013 Read time: 3 mins
The 814 VTT Technical Research Centre in Finland is involved in an extensive international Drive C2X project that tests and develops intelligent transport solutions, aimed at improving safety and efficiency in road traffic and reducing the carbon footprint of motoring. The project includes large-scale testing of inter-vehicle communication and communication between vehicles and the roadside infrastructure system. The tests are being carried out using cars from 1685 Mercedes-Benz, 4233 Opel and 609 Volvo in slippery and demanding weather conditions in the city of Tampere, Finland.

“The purpose of the project is to use large-scale field trials to examine the effects of systems based on inter-vehicle communication and communication between vehicles and the roadside infrastructure system. Testing in Tampere focuses on demanding weather conditions and warning of slippery road surfaces,” explains Harri Koskinen, senior scientist at VTT. “VTT has competence and experience in the analysis of the impacts of intelligent transport systems."

First-stage field trials were completed at the Tampere test site in May 2013. “We performed the First tests successfully and within the planned schedule. We are now implementing the second stage where automobile manufacturers are already involved with their own cars. Our collaboration with Mercedes-Benz, Opel and Volvo manufacturers has become closer. It seems leading car manufacturers have confidence in VTT’s competence,” says Koskinen. “We arrange tests for them in demanding and slippery conditions.”

The second stage, in November-December 2013, tested a system where the driver receives information on slippery road surfaces and traffic signs over a 22-kilometre stretch of road.

“The measuring points along the road transmit warnings of slippery stretches and traffic signs – such as right of way, warning triangles and speed limits – to the vehicle's display device, 400 to 500 metres in advance,” Koskinen says. “We have thirty drivers here, and collect a huge amount of data from their test drives for analysis.”   

In all, more than 80 drivers will have taken part in the Tampere field trials. The data collected from the tests will be analysed in spring 2014. “VTT experts have a leading role in the analysis of this data. The impact analysis process has only just begun, but preliminary results seem to indicate the tested systems having a positive impact, not least on road traffic safety,” says Koskinen. “We’ve been collaborating with automobile manufacturers for a long time, and this will continue. Russia is also an increasingly interesting market area for car manufacturers, and weather conditions there are much the same as we have in Finland."

The results of the Drive C2X project will be released in France in July 2014.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Deadlines approach for Europe’s automatic crash alert system
    September 15, 2016
    The EU-co-funded I_ HeERO (Infrastructure_ Harmonised eCall European Pilot) project is working to ensure the readiness of national networks of call centres - known as public safety answering posts (PSAPs) - to deal with automated crash alerts arriving via the continent-wide 112 emergency phone number. Following on from its HeERO and HeERO2 pre-deployment predecessors, which enjoyed €16m (US$17.76m) in EU funding, the new initiative runs from 1 January 2015 to 31 December 2017. It has €30.9 million (US$34.
  • Six businesses accelerate towards road safety trials in England
    September 3, 2024
    Hazard reduction is aim of safety tech competition from National Highways
  • VTT shows off NANOcare lamination technology for first time at CARTES
    November 6, 2014
    Lamination plate specialist VTT, whose technology helps to create secure documents such as passports, driving licences and bank cards, is showing off its NANOcare product for the first time at CARTES SECURE CONNEXIONS.
  • Amsterdam Group turn ITS theory into practice
    August 6, 2013
    ASECAP’s Marko Jandrisits discusses the Amsterdam Group’s efforts to bring a sense of order to cooperative ITS deployments. When an issue arises which is deemed to require a technological solution governments and public-sector agencies around the world all too often tread the same sorry path. A decision is made to research and develop said technology to the production-ready stage, the work is done and the technology realised but then the money for deployment runs out and the technology is left on the shelf