Skip to main content

Golden Ice' demonstrates precision salt spreading in Prague

The EU-funded 'Golden Ice' project has demonstrated a new EGNOS-guided system for safer, more economical and more ecologically responsible salt distribution on winter roads.
March 15, 2012 Read time: 2 mins
The 1116 European Union-funded 'Golden Ice' project has demonstrated a new EGNOS-guided system for safer, more economical and more ecologically responsible salt distribution on winter roads. At the demonstration event in Prague, participants watched as Golden Ice allowed operators at a control centre to track a salt spreading vehicle moving through city streets in real-time. The onboard device automatically engaged, adjusted and disengaged actual salt distribution, using a complex algorithm developed by project partners, and the vehicle driver demonstrated the use of the eCall emergency communication system.

According to Golden Ice technical coordinator Fabrizio Domeneci, "Our new onboard unit allows us to use GPS navigation signals, augmented by EGNOS and EDAS, to track our salt-spreading vehicles at all times and to control the amount of salt being applied in a very precise way, based on real weather conditions and specific road morphology.”

By using EGNOS to correct and augment existing GNSS signals, Golden Ice is able to command spreaders automatically, without the need for human intervention, to apply just the right amount of salt, no more and no less, to provide the maximum level of safety for winter drivers, even directing salt application to conform precisely to road morphology, as roads turn, narrow and widen.

Project partners say their most conservative estimates show the system will reduce salt consumption by at least 10 per cent, and some are convinced the figure will be much higher, as much as 40 per cent. And, they add, it is ready for the market. The system works and is ready to go.

The Golden Ice system also includes an integrated eCall function to communicate pinpointed accident data to municipal authorities and emergency response centres. This key safety function is activated in the event of an accident involving the spreader vehicle itself, but it also allows the driver to engage the eCall system manually, to signal other nearby emergency situations.

The Golden Ice consortium was coordinated by Italy's 3921 SAET, coordinator of the project, which developed the new onboard unit. Other partners in the consortium include 3922 Arvel Industries, part of the Italian Giletta group, a manufacturer of salt spreaders and snow ploughs; 3923 Istituto Superiore Mario Boella, an R&D institution that provided expertise in GNSS technologies GPS and Galileo, while the insurance company 3924 Allianz provided help with the integrated eCall system. Finally, 3925 Hanes in the Czech Republic supplied the actual vehicle.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Cat’s wider range
    May 20, 2019
    Caterpillar is offering new machine control packages for use with dozers Caterpillar is widening its range of solutions for dozers with the introduction of the GRADE with 3D system for its D3K2, D4K2 and D5K2 models. This package is an automated grade control system using GNSS technology to position the machine's blade, without operator input, from first rough cut to finish grade. In addition, GRADE with 3D incorporates the Cat AccuGrade Ready Option. This system allows the use of universal-total-stati
  • Data collection key to software developments
    February 13, 2012
    The collection and handling of data are key technology drivers in the software sector. New methods of data collection and manipulation are driving significant developments in software at present. The latest technology allows designers and engineers to collect, store and manipulate ever larger amounts of data. Growing use of mobile field equipment for both data collection and field management is driving interactive systems. And in an interview this month Autodesk senior vice-president for the construction an
  • Springtime for the use of analytics
    January 20, 2021
    Winter road maintenance can be made more efficient and effective through the use of big data and analytics, says Samu Karanko, head of science for Vaisala Digital in Europe.
  • Hamm’s Dr Stefan Klumpp explains future of autonomous compaction
    December 20, 2016
    Autonomous vehicles that can move around without human intervention are not yet a part of everyday life, but they are almost within reach.