Skip to main content

RuggedCom introduces wireless broadband solution for mass transit

RuggedCom, a Siemens company, is adding new features to its RuggedMAX portfolio enabling mass transit companies to extend persistent broadband connections to fleets of vehicles, buses or trains.
April 23, 2013 Read time: 1 min
Sean Fraser with the RuggedMAX wireless solution
846 RuggedCom, a 189 Siemens company, is adding new features to its RuggedMAX portfolio enabling mass transit companies to extend persistent broadband connections to fleets of vehicles, buses or trains.

RuggedMAX is a wireless solution based on 4G technology designed extend IP networks over large distances to fixed and mobile users. RuggedMAX is a high-performance, long range, secure family of products, fully compliant with the WiMAX 802.16e Wave 2 (MIMO) mobile broadband wireless standard.

The new functionality extends multi-megabit IP connectivity to moving vehicles, allowing them to send  passenger information, monitoring and status, ticketing, or streaming video surveillance back to a network control centre.

RuggedMAX technology, called Standalone mobility, makes the new capabilities possible, enabling seamless handover between different base stations regardless of the underlying applications. Mobile WiMAX solutions based on 802.16e typically already support this solution, but Standalone mobility is unique in that it does not require a centralised router, called an ASN gateway, and therefore improves performance and reliability while decreasing cost and complexity. The solution is currently available in 3.65, 4.9 and 5.8 GHz.

%$Linker: 2 Asset <?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-16"?><dictionary /> 4 43248 0 oLinkAsset <span class="mouselink">www.RuggedCom.com</span> www.ruggedcom.com false /EasySiteWeb/GatewayLink.aspx?alId=43248 false false%>

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Lumenera in the picture at ITS
    April 22, 2013
    Camera supplier Lumenera is exhibiting its camera systems at ITS America first time under its own name. Previously the company’s cameras have been exhibited alongside the traffic surveillance and enforcement products into which they are incorporated.
  • Temporary traffic signal and integrated waiting time display
    February 28, 2014
    The Solar Tempo Traffic Light, which TTS says is the only temporary traffic light to integrate a waiting time display, is visible up to 40 metres. The time display reduces impatient behaviour on the road. Flexible and easy to use, Tempo Traffic Light offers the ability to manage junctions for all road configurations, and uses renewable energy with its solar panel and charge regulator.
  • ARH promotes Hermes traffic management system
    March 25, 2014
    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
  • SwRI launches Automotive Consortium for Embedded Security
    September 8, 2014
    Southwest Research Institute (SwRI) launched the Automotive Consortium for Embedded Security (ACES) to investigate leading-edge technologies and understand and reduce the risk of attack.