Skip to main content

Wavetronix showcases detectors for all traffic situations

Wavetronix is using ITS America to showcase its league of hero sensors and the challenging traffic problems they face. Many of these problems are truly wicked, from the diabolically dangerous wrong-way driver to the dastardly dilemma of inefficient intersections. Recent exploits even include an Oregon DOT project selected as a 2015 Best of ITS America Awards finalist. “Disguised as a mild-mannered white box, SmartSensors keep a watchful eye on the world’s traffic,” says Michael R. Kline, the Americas regio
June 1, 2015 Read time: 2 mins
David Kuhns of Wavetronix displays the hero sensors
148 Wavetronix is using ITS America to showcase its league of hero sensors and the challenging traffic problems they face. Many of these problems are truly wicked, from the diabolically dangerous wrong-way driver to the dastardly dilemma of inefficient intersections. Recent exploits even include an Oregon DOT project selected as a 2015 Best of ITS America Awards finalist.

“Disguised as a mild-mannered white box, SmartSensors keep a watchful eye on the world’s traffic,” says Michael R. Kline, the Americas regional business development director at Wavetronix. “There’s SmartSensor HD’s true high definition, dual-beam radar; SmartSensor Advance’s dynamic, ETA-based dilemma zone protection; and SmartSensor Matrix’s Radar Vision for true presence detection at intersection stop bars.”

In Texas, SmartSensor HD helps identify wrong way drivers on a 15-mile stretch of Highway 281 near San Antonio, in a system that has reduced wrong way driving events by nearly 30 per cent.

Utah DOT uses SmartSensors Advance and Matrix to measure traffic signal performance to ensure its system of more than 1,100 intersections is operating properly. “UDOT reports only one in four vehicles will encounter a red light today thanks to its unique system,” Kline says. In Oregon, a 7.5-mile, two-to-three lane stretch of the OR 217 freeway was the site of more than 200 vehicle crashes each year.  To improve safety, ODOT added lanes and implemented traveller information, queue warning and variable advisory speed systems. The project utilises SmartSensor HD and other detection devices, and is one of this year’s ITS America Awards finalists in the Best New Innovative Product, Service or Application category.

“We’re very proud of the performance of our sensors and the number of drivers we help each day have safe, efficient journeys,” Kline says.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Debating the future of in-vehicle systems
    December 6, 2012
    Industry experts talk to Jason Barnes about the legislative situation of current and future in-vehicle systems. Articles about technology development can have a tendency to reference Moore’s Law with almost indecent regularity and haste but the fact remains that despite predictions of slow-down or plateauing, the pace remains unrelenting. That juxtaposes with a common tendency within the ITS industry: to concentrate on the technology and assume that much else – legislation, business cases and so on – will m
  • Delphi’s self-driving Audi completes 3,400-mile trip
    April 7, 2015
    UK company Delphi Automotive has completed the longest automated drive in North America, travelling from San Francisco to New York in the first coast-to-coast trip ever taken by an automated vehicle. Nearly 3,400 miles were covered with 99 per cent of the drive in fully automated mode. The drive was used by Delphi engineers to research and collect information that will help further advance active safety technology – the most rapidly growing technology sector of the auto industry. The team collected nearly
  • WEBINAR: 'We’re uniquely exposed to cyberthreats in this industry'
    November 1, 2024
    Watch on-demand: Defending ITS and Roadways from Cyberthreats
  • IBTTA’s roll-call of excellence
    September 2, 2022
    Winners of the IBTTA’s Toll Excellence Awards will be presented with their trophies during the 90th Annual Meeting & Exhibition in Austin, Texas