Skip to main content

Panasonic demonstrates evolution of vehicle On-Board Units in Vienna

Panasonic is showcasing the evolution of vehicle On-Board Units (OBU) which combine electronic toll collection with provision of real-time travel information to drivers. The first generation of DSRC-based OBUs launched to market in Japan back in 2001, where around 40 million are now in use. The technology is especially relevant in Panasonic’s home country, as all motorways are private and congestion is a common problem. Value-added services such as local parking information can also be accessed.
October 24, 2012 Read time: 2 mins
Panasonic's Masahiko Nakamura and his company's vehicle OBU technology
598 Panasonic is showcasing the evolution of vehicle On-Board Units (OBU) which combine electronic toll collection with provision of real-time travel information to drivers.

The first generation of DSRC-based OBUs launched to market in Japan back in 2001, where around 40 million are now in use. The technology is especially relevant in Panasonic’s home country, as all motorways are private and congestion is a common problem. Value-added services such as local parking information can also be accessed.

The real-time information services enable drivers to take routing decisions and so help to reduce congestion and carbon emissions. 2011 saw the launch of a second-generation OBU which added further functionalities, such as obstacle warning and real-time images of traffic conditions – as part of an initiative undertaken in concert with the Japanese Government, work has gone on to install a series of cameras and antennas on strategic roads and these feed information into the OBUs. Warnings can include map information, images and advice on which lane to use in order to avoid obstacles such as lost cargo, stopped vehicles or incidents.

The company is also showing its third-generation OBU.

“This is a prototype of a hybrid GPS/DSRC solution,” says Product Design Group Manager, Masahiko Nakamura. “It gives much clearer positional information, which translates into the ability to provide much more localised and relevant information to the individual driver. At the same time, more detailed knowledge of where vehicles are gives traffic managers a more accurate picture of road conditions.

“The new OBU has been under test for a year in Brazil on a fleet of 100 taxis, in preparation for the next Summer Olympics and Soccer World Cup. It’s anticipated that it will hit the market in Japan in 2014, and then be launched in Brazil thereafter in time for the sporting events.”
%$Linker: 2 Asset <?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-16"?><dictionary /> 4 42556 0 oLinkAsset <span class="mouselink">www.panasonic.net</span> Panasonic web false /EasySiteWeb/GatewayLink.aspx?alId=42556 false false%>

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Trafficware new wireless detection system
    April 22, 2013
    Visitors to the ITS America Annual Meeting have the opportunity to see a new wireless roadway detection system from Trafficware. Operating under a Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) patent in an exclusive license agreement, the company’s engineers developed the Valence Pod, a wireless system that uses roadway sensors to detect the
  • Camea introduces high speed WIM system
    October 19, 2012
    Czech company Camea will use the ITS World Congress to present its UnicamWIM, high speed weigh-in-motion system. A complete turnkey solution for variety of weigh-in-motion applications, from high quality traffic reports and statistics to sophisticated enforcement systems, the system enables pre-selection of potentially overloaded vehicles which can then be sent for precise weighing without having any impact on a traffic flow. Camea points out that the system, which has been type-approved for use in the Czec
  • Axis shows award-winning Lightfinder technology at World Congress
    October 24, 2012
    Axis’s range of digital cameras for the security and ITS markets add intelligence at the front to enable many different applications, says the company’s Segment Marketing Manager Stefan Alfresson. “Our open applications platform allows software developers to produce apps themselves which integrators and customers can then download and implement for themselves. Most companies use video servers to carry out their analytics but our cameras, by courtesy of their intrinsic intelligence, can do much of the proces
  • Gewi demonstrates how its TIC connects systems, vehicles and travellers
    October 23, 2012
    The 2012 ITS World Congress marks Gewi’s 20th anniversary of keeping travellers informed worldwide, and the company is exhibiting how its TIC connects systems, vehicles, and travellers. TIC has been used in live traffic information systems since 1997, and is used worldwide by many types of organisations including government agencies, police, DoT’s, commercial RDS-TMC and TPEG service providers, automobile clubs, road operators, radio stations and car and device navigation manufacturers. Recently, Gewi added