Skip to main content

GTT bolsters solutions with GNSS

Opticom solutions cover transit signal priority and traffic sensing technology
By Ben Spencer January 7, 2021 Read time: 2 mins
GTT says GNSS gives customers across to multiple satellite networks (© Andrey Armyagov | Dreamstime.com)

Global Traffic Technologies (GTT) has added the Global Navigation Satellites System (GNSS) to its Opticom solutions to improve the reliability of connected vehicle services. 

GTT says this collection of satellites transmits positioning and timing data to GNSS receivers, which use this data to determine location.

Connected vehicle applications rely on GPS to determine the real-time location of vehicles.

GTT describes GPS as a single system that employs 31 satellites compared to GNSS which utilises around the world, including GPS (America), Glonass (Russia), Galileo (European Union) and BeiDou (China).

According to GTT, adding GNSS will enable more reliable priority control in dense urban areas with obstructions such as bridges, tunnels and tall buildings.

It will also reduce performance issues that can diminish priority control's effectiveness by helping ensure the correct intersection receives the request for a green light as priority vehicles approach intersections, the company adds. 

GTT insists better location services will minimise disruptions to traffic and help bus drivers and light rail train conductors navigate dense urban areas in safer and faster.

Ravi Shah, GTT vice president of product development, says: “It’s well-documented that urban canyons and multipath effects can negatively impact the accuracy and overall performance of GPS-based locating."

"The advantage of adding GNSS is that it gives our customers access to multiple satellite networks, thereby reducing interference and increasing accuracy while providing reliable redundancy and availability.”

Despite this, the company recognises that communication to these satellites can be lost temporarily in areas with tall buildings, tunnels or multi-level roads. 

GTT has therefore added the ability to more effectively determine vehicle position in these areas with software-based dead reckoning. 

If satellite communication is lost, dead reckoning is expected to calculate a moving vehicle's position by estimating its direction and distance travelled from its last known geo-location.

GTT’s software-based dead reckoning solution functions with sensors built into the Opticom devices, with no additional vehicle wiring required.

Chad Mack, GTT’s director of product management, says: “Opticom, like other connected-vehicle applications, relies on accurate vehicle position to deliver high performance solutions.”

GTT says on its website that its Opticom solutions can provide intelligent transit signal priority for public transit and flexible traffic sensing technology for a variety of traffic applications. 

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Russia ramps-up technologies for transport communications
    March 28, 2018
    Covering an area almost as big as the US and Canada combined, Russia is planning to increase transport-related communications to improve road safety and traffic efficiency. Eugene Gerden reports. Russia’s government plans to increase road safety through the use of modern transport communication and the development of the relevant legislative base. Initially, particular attention will be on the introduction of connected cars and Vehicle to Anything (V2X) technologies. Russia has fewer than 60,000 connect
  • Future of tolling: the priorities
    January 14, 2020
    In the final part of his investigation into the future of tolling technology, Josef Czako of Moving Forward Consulting asks what industry figures see as the priorities going forward…
  • National truck tolling scheme compensates for transit traffic
    July 13, 2012
    Q-Free's Per Frederik Ecker talks about the Slovak Republic's new truck tolling system, which is intended to compensate for the large amounts of transit traffic which passes through the country. In January this year Q-Free, together with Siemens, was awarded the contract to deliver the new national truck tolling scheme in the Slovak Republic. This will be operated by Slovakia SkyToll on a 13-year concession and Q-Free is supplying the central tolling and enforcement system, together with a three-year servic
  • u-blox delivers cost-effective multi-GNSS performance
    December 18, 2014
    Swiss-based u-blox has launched what it claims is the world’s smallest stand-alone positioning module, the EVA M8M, bringing multi-GNSS performance into the ultra-compact EVA footprint. The cost-effective module supports US GPS, Russian GLONASS, Chinese BeiDou, Japanese QZSS and SBAS augmentation systems.