Skip to main content

GMV upgrades Grupo Ruiz buses

Vehicles in the Portuguese town of Cascais will feature an emergency eCall system
By Ben Spencer March 23, 2021 Read time: 2 mins
GMV says sensors will count passengers on the bus entry and exit doors (image credit: Grupo Ruiz)

GMV is to combine a fleet management system, passenger information system and on-board video surveillance for Grupo Ruiz buses in the Portuguese town of Cascais.

As part of the fleet management system, buses will be fitted with GMV's inhouse REC30 equipment, which pools the functions of localisation and on-board communications using a TFT (thin film transistor) console as driver interface.

Grupo Ruiz’s control centre will be fitted with GMV’s fleet-management server plus an advanced operator post to manage the system. Five additional operator posts will be set up for the municipal district of Cascais.

The onboard passenger information system utilises a TFT screen and will be connected to LED panels both onboard and outside the bus. 

GMV will also supply standardised information to the bus stop information panels. 

The video-surveillance system will consist of 4 IP cameras on Grupo Ruiz’s full-sized buses plus 3 IP cameras on each of its minibuses. The REC30 will act as an onboard video recorder in connection with the control centre’s video-surveillance software. 

Sensors will be able to count passengers on the bus entry and exit doors to keep track of occupancy levels, the company adds. 

Grupo buses will also include an emergency eCall system which establishes a connection with an emergency services call centre for potential accidents or at the driver's request.

The system includes onboard EP100 equipment, which taps into the inertial system and the vehicle’s CAN (controller area network) bus to detect the potential accident and set up the voice- and data-connection with the emergency centre. 

Through the data connection, the on-board system sends information such as location, accident time and vehicle identification number while the voice channel allows the driver and passengers to communicate with emergency services. 

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Horizon predicts eVTOL consolidation
    May 27, 2021
    Investment will inevitably focus on companies with viable prototypes, Horizon says
  • Kyocera makes V2I connection
    May 25, 2022
    Company will display variety of sensors and imaging solutions at Yokohama exhibition
  • Temporary CCTV poses more challenges than permanent installations
    June 12, 2015
    Long-term roadworks pose particular problems for temporary surveillance installations. Converting the hard shoulder to a running lane, either full- or part-time, is the UK Highways Agency’s solution to ease motorway congestion. This is leading to a number of long-term projects where large stretches of the hard shoulder are closed off by temporary concrete barriers and during these roadwork programmes, temporary CCTV cameras are deployed to monitor and record vehicle traffic and workers.
  • KentTablet new generation of contactless fare collection
    October 19, 2012
    Turkey-headquartered KentKart will use the ITS World Congress to show a new generation of onboard public transport tablet. The KentTablet provides contactless fare collection through a capacitive LCD touch screen, vehicle tracking and fleet management, passenger information in vehicle and at the station, employee management, emergency and alarm management, and onboard video surveillance services for public and private transportation companies.