Skip to main content

Applus IDIADA collision avoidance

Spanish company Applus IDIADA is showing the technology behind its Project VRAIN (Vehicular Risk Awareness Intelligent Network), which aims to improve safety for its clients in the automotive industry.
September 7, 2014 Read time: 2 mins
ITSWC 2014 Master Avatar
Spanish company 7863 Applus IDIADA is showing the technology behind its Project VRAIN (Vehicular Risk Awareness Intelligent Network), which aims to improve safety for its clients in the automotive industry.

The system, incorporating a radar and vehicle-to-vehicle (V2V) communications to enable vehicles to avoid collisions, is operational at the company’s south Barcelona high-speed proving ground. Several clients can be performing tests at the proving ground simultaneously, at speeds of up to 150mph /250km/h. To solve potential safety problems the installation of the VRAIN equipment makes use of GPS and V2V system to predict individual vehicles’ trajectories and possible impending collisions, allowing avoiding action to be taken.

Sub-lane GNSS accuracy is designed to minimise false warnings, as only vehicles in the same lane and below certain ‘time-to-collision’ thresholds will trigger alerts.

The system was developed initially to improve safety at Applus IDIADA’s own proving grounds, but also to refine it before it is released to the market.The company is hoping to have the system on the market from 2016, said Applus IDIADA’s ITS project manager, Alvaro Arrue.

The company is also showing progress on the i-GAME project, of which it is a member of the developing consortium, together with TuE and VIKTORIA. The aim of i-GAME is to speed up real-life implementation and interoperability of wireless communication-based automated driving.

Booth: 2407
%$Linker: 2 Asset <?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-16"?><dictionary /> 4 99468 0 oLinkExternal <span class="mouselink">www.applusidiada.com </span> Applus IDIADA Website false /EasySiteWeb/GatewayLink.aspx?alId=99468 false false%>

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • On Semiconductor advances image sensing solutions
    October 29, 2014
    With the recent acquisitions of Truesense Imaging and Aptina Imaging, ON Semiconductor is now a major supplier of high-performance image sensor solutions used in intelligent transportation systems (ITS), including traf¬fic enforcement, intersection monitoring, and automated number plate recognition (ANPR).
  • Latest tolling, traffic enforcement systems from Vitronic
    August 11, 2014
    Vitronic will use the ITS World Congress Detroit 2014 to showcase the next- generation of the company’s LIDAR-based traffic enforcement. The company says the new system builds on the best-in-class measurement technology of the revolutionary PoliScan product line and can be applied to a variety of enforcement scenarios, such as speed enforcement, red light enforcement, and tailgating. According to Vitronic, the new system has already proven its capabilities by outperforming competition in a recent tender in
  • New dart series from Basler
    October 29, 2014
    Camera manufacturer Basler is expanding its portfolio of cameras for intelligent traffic systems. The new Basler dart series has been designed to meet the need for basic, stripped-down cameras for simple traffic applications, such as access control or in-vehicle ALPR solutions. For more demanding systems, Basler has equipped two ace GigE and two ace USB 3.0 models, as well as its IP cameras, with the powerful Sony IMX174 sensor. With the python 5000 sensor from ON Semiconductor, Basler has
  • MetSense camera aids winter road maintenance
    March 10, 2014
    Swedish company MetSense will be at Intertraffic Amsterdam to highlight its complete sensor solutions for winter road maintenance, and will present MetSense 2DRoad, a multi-pixel camera system for detection of road status in two dimensions. When installed on a road weather station, the camera system can offer a visual image of one or several lanes of road with a semi-transparent overlay of current road condition, such as dry, wet, ice, or snow, in thousands of points on the road surface.