Skip to main content

Tracker patents breakthrough telematics technology

UK fleet tracking expert, Tracker, has unveiled what it claims is a ground-breaking new technology that offers fleet managers the most accurate vehicle idling data available on the market. The company has patented its Transient Voltage Detection (TVD) technology and incorporated it into Tracker Fleet.
March 26, 2012 Read time: 2 mins
RSSUK fleet tracking expert, 4302 Tracker, has unveiled what it claims is a ground-breaking new technology that offers fleet managers the most accurate vehicle idling data available on the market. The company has patented its Transient Voltage Detection (TVD) technology and incorporated it into Tracker Fleet.

As Stephen Doran, managing director of Tracker explains, fuel consumption is a key issue for businesses, but the ability to accurately determine when a journey truly starts or an engine’s running time, journey times and average speeds have all been notoriously difficult. “This hasn’t been helped by the fact that vehicle electrical systems have become more complex and in turn, harder to find the right place to connect the ignition sensor. Our engineers have designed a way to overcome this by sensing the electrical noise that is generated when an engine is running,” Doran said.

Traditionally, fleet tracking units have been connected to a vehicle by using two wires to connect to the vehicle battery and a third wire to connect to the vehicle ignition switch.  When the ignition is turned on or off, and therefore the vehicle has started or stopped, journey information is recorded and reported to fleet managers.  The new TVD technology from Tracker eliminates the need to connect a third wire to the vehicle ignition switch.

Instead TVD technology will sense any increase in voltage and, more importantly, electrical noise associated with the engine having started. This is noise that is generated by electronic systems in the vehicle such as the alternator. So Tracker’s fleet telematics offering will automatically and accurately detect through the two wires to the vehicle supply, when the vehicle engine has started and stopped.

“TVD technology gives a true reflection of idle time, critical for many fleet operators.  Previously idle times would be generated even if the ignition switch was set to ‘accessory’, for example to listen to the radio.  In this scenario the fleet managers got a notification that the vehicle has started, even though it hadn’t, with the idle measurement starting at that point.  With TVD we won’t have that margin of error, allowing us to always give customers the most accurate idle time,” Doran said.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Unlit bollard liability for UK authorities
    April 19, 2012
    A ruling by a court in Cambridge is likely to have major implications for councils and authorities across the UK after a cyclist won compensation when he collided with a bollard at night. These were placed on a cycle route to prevent vehicular access to the cycle path, which runs alongside the River Cam and is used day and night by cyclists who commute to/from Cambridge, as a safer alternative to using the busy A10.
  • Kapsch offers improved cab radios for railway communications
    September 18, 2014
    Kapsch CarrierCom, in partnership with Sierra Wireless, has launched two improved railway cab radios. The RC900 voice and data cab radio and the RD900 data radio are equipped with the latest Sierra Wireless HPRM1radio modules called, which ensure additional robustness against unwanted radio interference and blocking. A stable radio connection is an essential requirement for the railway system. Due to the growing networks of public operators, more and more interference is affecting the communication withi
  • Nokia to integrate Navteq in new business unit
    April 19, 2012
    Nokia has announced that Michael Halbherr has been appointed executive vice president to spearhead the company’s revised mission in mobile and location-based services. He will lead a new location and commerce business unit, which will be formed by integrating the Navteq business with Nokia's social location services operations. Nokia says the unit will develop a new class of integrated social location products and services for consumers, as well as platform services and local commerce services for device ma
  • Delivering accurate vehicle identification
    August 1, 2012
    In the Netherlands, TNO, the independent research organisation, has been engaged in a project on behalf of the RDW, the Dutch vehicle registration and licensing authority, intended to look at the feasibility of using electronic means to make vehicle identification more accurate and less susceptible to fraud. Electronic Vehicle Identification (EVI) has been in existence in various forms for several years now but TNO was tasked with finding out whether OnBoard Unit (OBU)-based applications could be complement