Skip to main content

Oklahoma DOT opts for IRD WIM screening system

Oklahoma Department of Transportation (ODOT) has awarded International Road Dynamics (IRD) a US$2.54 million project to build, implement, and maintain a new and innovative port-of-entry (POE) electronic screening system (ESS) for commercial vehicles at Interstate-40 westbound, Sequoyah County, Oklahoma. This contract includes the supply and installation of IRD's weigh-in-motion (WIM) and intelligent roadside operation credentialing (iROC) system utilising license plate reader (LPR) and USDOT reader technolo
May 29, 2015 Read time: 2 mins

Oklahoma Department of Transportation (ODOT) has awarded 69 International Road Dynamics (IRD) a US$2.54 million project to build, implement, and maintain a new and innovative port-of-entry (POE) electronic screening system (ESS) for commercial vehicles at Interstate-40 westbound, Sequoyah County, Oklahoma.  

This contract includes the supply and installation of IRD's weigh-in-motion (WIM) and intelligent roadside operation credentialing (iROC) system utilising license plate reader (LPR) and USDOT reader technology, vehicle dimensioning, fully integrated static scale, video verification, vehicle movement compliance, and operational software.  
 
The purpose of the ESS is to better focus limited resources on potentially high risk or non-compliant commercial vehicles. This system will allow trucks with compliant weight, dimensions and credentials to bypass the POEs at highway speeds, thereby reducing the number of trucks that are required to stop at the inspection stations.  With fewer delays at these facilities compliant carriers save time, safety and efficiency is improved, and greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions are reduced.  
 
Terry Bergan, IRD's president and CEO said: "We are pleased to have been awarded this very significant project. The addition of this state-of-the-art e-screening system for commercial vehicles in Oklahoma is another example of an increased customer focus to improve efficiency utilising high speed weight, safety and credentialing technologies."

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Introducing the CitySync automated license plate recognition solution
    September 20, 2012
    Image Sensing Systems, US-based supplier of software-based detection solutions for ITS, law enforcement, security and parking, introduces its CitySync Automated License Plate Recognition (LPR) solution, the latest in LPR technology and software. The CitySync ALPR is a complete system and includes the company’s LPR cameras, highly accurate recognition software and their Jet-BOF back-office system, a fully functional, web-based back-office that provides storage, matching and reporting of LPR data. The system
  • Introducing the CitySync automated license plate recognition solution
    September 20, 2012
    Image Sensing Systems, US-based supplier of software-based detection solutions for ITS, law enforcement, security and parking, introduces its CitySync Automated License Plate Recognition (LPR) solution, the latest in LPR technology and software. The CitySync ALPR is a complete system and includes the company’s LPR cameras, highly accurate recognition software and their Jet-BOF back-office system, a fully functional, web-based back-office that provides storage, matching and reporting of LPR data. The system
  • Diverse development of tolling business models
    April 25, 2013
    A diversity of tolling business models offers a wider toolbox of highway finance options, as the IBTTA’s Patrick Jones explains. The business models for America’s tolled highways have gone through several different evolutions over the last 75 years, reflecting a succession of shifts in transportation policy and politics, financing and funding models, urban patterns, customer needs, and technology. And with more and more decision-makers expressing renewed interest in tolling, it’s that very diversity that ma
  • Kistler installs 'world's largest digital WiM site' in smallest US state
    September 5, 2024
    Forty Lineas digital quartz sensors cover 10 lanes on bridge in Rhode Island