Skip to main content

UK tyre monitoring specialist provides technology to US highway project

UK tyre-monitoring specialist WheelRight has provided its drive-over tyre pressure monitoring technology to The Ray, a US-based project designed to showcase new technologies that will create a blueprint for the sustainable motorways of tomorrow. Comprising an 18-mile stretch of highway on West Georgia’s Interstate 85, The Ray is a proving ground for new ideas and technologies that will transform the transport infrastructure of the future. The environmental project is named after Ray C. Anderson, an Ameri
December 2, 2016 Read time: 2 mins
UK tyre-monitoring specialist 8005 WheelRight has provided its drive-over tyre pressure monitoring technology to 8353 The Ray, a US-based project designed to showcase new technologies that will create a blueprint for the sustainable motorways of tomorrow.

Comprising an 18-mile stretch of highway on West Georgia’s Interstate 85, The Ray is a proving ground for new ideas and technologies that will transform the transport infrastructure of the future. The environmental project is named after Ray C. Anderson, an American entrepreneur recognised as a leader in green business ethics.

Working with vehicle partner 5229 Kia Motors Manufacturing Georgia (KMMG) and the charitable foundation behind the project, WheelRight is providing its technology at The Ray’s Visitor Information Centre. This will be the first publicly available installation of the WheelRight drive-over tyre safety system in the US.

The drive-over solution comprises an array of sensors in a strip embedded in the road reads tyre pressures and tread depths as the vehicle drivers over it with no need for additional sensors, such as TPMS, on the car. The system is connected to an automatic number plate recognition camera so the data can be assigned to the correct vehicle and transmitted by SMS to the driver or to the fleet engineer or fleet management system.

KMMG and The Ray have committed to fully fund the acquisition and installation of the WheelRight tyre safety technology, thereby providing the services free of charge to drivers on The Ray, and creating more awareness of the dangers and negative economic impacts of driving with under or overinflated tyres and badly worn treads. Annually, more than 762,000 visitors travelling in nearly 244,000 cars and trucks stop at the West Point VIC for travel information and comfort breaks.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Motorists want roads repaired before smart motorways, says survey
    December 5, 2014
    According to research by Bury-based online car supermarket JamJar Direct, which indicates that 47 per cent of Greater Manchester motorists claim to have been affected by the construction works, communications around the M60 smart motorway improvements are sorely lacking. Almost two thirds of Greater Manchester motorists (62 per cent) are aware that the M60 is being turned into a smart motorway, but over 40 per cent, equivalent to 81,000 vehicles per day using affected stretch of M60 between junctions 8 a
  • Plate matching technology more accurate than conventional OCR
    February 3, 2012
    EngiNe srl's patented Plate Matching technique is something of a paradox, in that it achieves formal vehicle identification without recognising, in the accepted sense, the characters on its number plate. Here, Angelo Dionisi of ENG Group explains how it works
  • Developments in travel information display systems
    August 1, 2012
    David Crawford looks at recent developments in travel information display systems. It is important to remember that we are investing in Real-Time Passenger Information [RTPI] to increase ridership," says Robert Burke, Managing Director of New Zealand transit tracking technology specialist Connexionz, which has been involved in at-stop and remote passenger information since 1995. "Superior information improves the perception of public transport reliability and gives the passenger more choices and greater con
  • FTA says Highways Agency new name reflects importance of role
    December 10, 2014
    A government announcement has revealed that the UK’s Highways Agency will be replaced with Highways England and will be a government-owned company from April 2015. In support of the changes, the Freight Transport Association (FTA) has said that “the new name reflects the importance of its new role.” In its first strategic business plan, Highways England sets out how the new body will deliver the Government’s US$23.5 billion road investment programme over the next five years. The plan envisages spend