Skip to main content

Navtech highlights radar’s cost-effectiveness

At this year’s ITS World Congress, Navtech Radar will be demonstrating the cost-effectiveness of using radar for Automated Incident Detection (AID) and other applications. “Radar’s capabilities, even in extremely challenging visual conditions, are now proven beyond doubt and we’ve been working over the last couple of years to make procurement and operation very cost-competitive,” says Navtech’s founding partner Stephen Clark. “System for system, radar compares well with CCTV but once performance is taken in
October 23, 2012 Read time: 2 mins
At this year’s ITS World Congress, 819 NavTech Radar will be demonstrating the cost-effectiveness of using radar for Automated Incident Detection (AID) and other applications.

“Radar’s capabilities, even in extremely challenging visual conditions, are now proven beyond doubt and we’ve been working over the last couple of years to make procurement and operation very cost-competitive,” says Navtech’s founding partner Stephen Clark.

“System for system, radar compares well with CCTV but once performance is taken into account the balance starts to tilt in radar’s favour. A single radar system can see farther, and in 360. That typically means that fewer individual systems are needed for the same task. And radar’s reliable; Navtech products offer a mean time between failure of 75,000 hours – over eight years of continuous operation.”

In service, the cost savings continue. No lens to clean, as with a camera, means fewer potential road or infrastructure closures for maintenance. This gives significant safety benefits from an operators’ perspective, indirect economic benefits in the case of congestion and – in the case of tolled roads and facilities – direct economic benefits as a result of uninterrupted operations.

“We’ve also increased radar’s utility,” Clark continues. “AID is now complemented by tailgating and illegal lane change monitoring applications, and more will follow. This is all part of our efforts to enrich the feature set and reduce overall the number and variety of systems needed to ensure safe, effective road operations, and to bring down both Capex and Opex costs.”

%$Linker: 2 Asset <?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-16"?><dictionary /> 4 43125 0 oLinkExternal www.navtechradar.com www.navtechradar.com false /EasySiteWeb/GatewayLink.aspx?alId=43125 true false%>

Related Content

  • September 7, 2014
    Toyota demos its Cooperative ITS technologies in Detroit
    Toyota is giving attendees at the 2014 ITS World Congress a preview of its Cooperative ITS initiative, an effort to build automated driving technology that notifies drivers of real-time information captured through communications between vehicles and with sensors installed on roadways.
  • October 23, 2012
    Efkon highlights portable and mobile enforcement solutions in Vienna
    Fundamental to efficient toll systems and traffic management solutions is enforcement, a core competency of Efkon and which it is highlighting at this ITS World Congress. The company says its range of stationary, portable and mobile enforcement solutions is based on five major modules: reliable vehicle detection, flexible and high performance vehicle classification, car to infrastructure communication (all DSRC variants), court proof evidence based on high quality imaging, and automatic assessment. Efkon's
  • February 26, 2014
    Roadside safety solutions, markings, barriers from Lindsay
    Barrier Systems and Snoline, operating within the Lindsay Transportation Solutions Group, will be highlighting their full line of crash cushions, guardrail end terminals, pavement markings and road barriers, including the Road Zipper system, at Intertraffic Amsterdam 2014. Lindsay says that Europe has been slow for the last three years but the company is pleased to announce new Road Zipper system projects in the UK, Germany and Holland this spring. During Intertraffic, the system will be used to manage
  • October 29, 2014
    Active Silicon’s frame grabbers for traffic vision systems
    Active Silicon offers its well established Camera Link and analogue frame grabbers in PC/104 and PCI/104-Express formats for use in real-time traffic vision systems. The Phoenix range contains two Camera Link PC/104 frame grabbers. The D24CL-104P32 supports acquisition from a single base Camera Link camera, while the D48CL-104PE1, using the PCI express bus, supports acquisition from a single medium or two base cameras. These two products have extensive on-board IO and support a wide operating temp