Skip to main content

Transyt 14 maintenance release

TRL has announced the Transyt 14.0.2 maintenance release which is free of charge to existing Transyt 14 customers. For both the UK and all the other many countries where SCOOT is installed, Transyt 14 now has the ability to import SCOOT flow data and assign this to Transyt model links. TRL has already provided Australian or SCATS-based terminology in the software but following on from a recent validation tour of Melbourne, Brisbane, Adelaide and Sydney, TRL has released further functionality for its Austral
January 25, 2012 Read time: 1 min
491 TRL has announced the Transyt 14.0.2 maintenance release which is free of charge to existing Transyt 14 customers. For both the UK and all the other many countries where SCOOT is installed, Transyt 14 now has the ability to import SCOOT flow data and assign this to Transyt model links. TRL has already provided Australian or SCATS-based terminology in the software but following on from a recent validation tour of Melbourne, Brisbane, Adelaide and Sydney, TRL has released further functionality for its Australian and New Zealand user base. 14.0.2 now has a brand-new data import and reporting link direct from SCATS that allows users to bring in SCATS flow data and assign the flows to a Transyt link. The reporting side of the software allows Transyt-optimised offsets to be put back into SCATS.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Tecsidel’s Pan-American Highway tunnel eases Lima’s traffic woes
    December 4, 2018
    The Pan-American Highway connects the US and Canada with Latin America, running for thousands of miles from Alaska in the north to Argentina in the south. Mauro Nogarin finds that one tunnel built underneath it is now providing relief for thousands of travellers each day On the Pan-American Highway, the lengthy series of roads which spans both American continents - from the US state of Alaska to the Latin American country of Argentina - ITS solutions are many and varied. One of these, in Peru’s capital
  • Travel times halve for tolling converts
    August 5, 2013
    The Port Mann Bridge in Vancouver is a prime example of how the latest ITS systems enable new infrastructures to be built and paid for while still providing additional user benefits. Vancouver has 2.2 million inhabitants and, like so many major cities, is divided into two by a river, the Frazer river. This combination makes Vancouver the second most congested city in North America and the most congested in Canada. Through the middle of the city runs the Trans-Canadian Highway 1 which crosses the Frazer Riv
  • Sell-out attendance at ITS Australia’s 2017 summit
    October 3, 2017
    A new record of over 400 international and Australian ITA leaders attended 5th annual Australian Intelligent Transport Systems Summit with more than 50 Australian international speakers at the Brisbane Convention and Exhibition Centre (27 – 28 September). ITS Australia hosted three exclusive functions- the Thought Leadership Series – with government ministers and leading influencers in Melbourne, Sydney and Brisbane. In addition, this year’s theme ‘Transforming Transport focused on Connected and Automat
  • Smartphone - the next technology for charging and tolling?
    January 25, 2012
    With all the debates over the most suitable future technology or technologies for charging and tolling, is it not time for the industry to look at what the rest of ITS is doing and bring a rank outsider - the smart phone - closer into the fold? By Jack Opiola, D'Artagnan Consulting LLC