Skip to main content

IRD shows integrated ITS solutions at World Congress

Canada-headquartered International Road Dynamics (IRD) will be attending the ITS World Congress to present integrated ITS solutions that make highways more efficient. The company will showcase products, software, and fully integrated systems for automated truck weigh stations using high-speed and low speed weigh-in-motion (WIM), automated toll collection and audit systems, advanced traffic data collection, security and access control, and fleet management using GPS.
September 26, 2012 Read time: 2 mins
An IRD toll system in India
Canada-headquartered 69 International Road Dynamics (IRD) will be attending the ITS World Congress to present integrated ITS solutions that make highways more efficient. The company will showcase products, software, and fully integrated systems for automated truck weigh stations using high-speed and low speed weigh-in-motion (WIM), automated toll collection and audit systems, advanced traffic data collection, security and access control, and fleet management using GPS. As IRD points out, it brings together WIM, machine vision, automatic vehicle identification, and communications technologies to be a ‘one source, multi-solution’ integrator, and claims to be the world’s largest supplier of integrated WIM systems.

A key component of many IRD systems is the iSINC (Intelligent Sensor Interface and Network Controller), rugged roadside electronics developed by IRD for integrated ITS applications such as virtual weigh stations, automated truck weigh stations, WIM@Toll, border security, credential screening, electronic toll collection (ETC) and highway traffic management systems (HTMS). The iSINC is the perfect controller for IRD’s high-accuracy WIM scales and sensors, and its modular design provides compatibility with a wide range of complementary sensors, vehicle ID, cameras, networks and message signs.

%$Linker: 2 Asset <?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-16"?><dictionary /> 4 12424 0 oLinkExternal www.irdinc.com IRD web false /EasySiteWeb/GatewayLink.aspx?alId=12424 true false%>

Related Content

  • October 18, 2012
    UK's TRL shows latest transport developments
    UK-headquartered TRL (Transport Research Laboratory) will focus on three key areas at the ITS World Congress: adaptive traffic control and new software releases; its expertise in managed motorways and cooperative systems; and its growing presence and work across the EU. This is exemplified by TRL taking the premier position on the EU Safety Framework and its in-depth knowledge of vehicle road charging, which sees a team currently working on a European truck road charging scheme.
  • March 3, 2014
    Innovative wind guard combats distortion
    Austrian company, Commend International, a specialist in security and communication solutions for parking and mass transit systems, will use Intertraffic Amsterdam 2014 to unveil the NoVento Wind Guard. The company says the device is an ingeniously simple solution to combat sound distortion caused by wind in help phone call connections at roadsides, toll gates, pay points, etc. A microphone attachment with a brush-like shape, the No Vento is precision crafted to dissipate noise causing wind swirls. Comme
  • March 21, 2014
    Cream of the crop in contention for Innovation Award
    Smart and innovative thinking is again about to be awarded here at Intertraffic Amsterdam, the world’s largest and best attended trade fair for the infrastructure, ITS traffic management, safety, parking, and smart mobility sectors. A total of 15 products have won through to the shortlist for the most innovative exhibits at the event. The official opening of Intertraffic Amsterdam 2014 takes place this morning from 08.30 to 09.30 at the Innovation Lab in the Elicium room where the winners of the Intertraffi
  • March 25, 2014
    ARH promotes Hermes traffic management system
    The ancient Greek messenger of the gods Hermes had the ability to move effortlessly across boundaries – in his case, between the worlds of gods and humans. Hungarian company ARH claims the same sort of ease of movement for its Hermes traffic management system, its new middleware designed to connect roadside endpoints with a central traffic management interface. Its aim is to offer its systems integrator partners what it describes as a flexible and fast piece of middleware that can be incorporated into an