Skip to main content

Ukraine opts for Kistler

Ukraine is working to set up 250 weigh-in-motion stations by 2025 in an effort to tackle rapidly increasing road damage by overweight vehicles
October 14, 2021 Read time: 2 mins
Because of the slim shape of Kistler’s Lineas quartz WIM sensors no massive cuts in the road are necessary for installation (image courtesy Kistler Group)

Already, 45 WIM stations – around half of them using Kistler’s Lineas quartz WIM sensors - have been set up on crucial transport routes across Ukraine.

The WIM stations allow Ukrainian authorities to automatically fine overloaded trucks. In addition, authorities will be able to analyse the data to help predict when a given road surface will need replacement or where further infrastructure development might be beneficial.

In Ukraine, the rapid decay of road surfaces has long been a major issue for Ukravtodor, the state agency responsible for maintaining the country’s major roads. Almost immediately after a road has been constructed or repaired, damage starts to appear. In the capital Kiev, the problem is most acute. About 40% of all trucks on the road in and around the city are either overweight or violate size restrictions.

On the agency’s website, Oleksandr Kubrakov, chairman of Ukravtodor comments that if everything is left as it is, a newly constructed road’s lifespan is a mere two years. To prevent this scenario, the national government launched a campaign to combat weight violations on Ukrainian roads that includes large-scale introduction of weigh-in-motion stations to back up the government’s resolve.

They weigh all passing vehicles without disrupting traffic and transmit the data to a control cabinet by the road for analysis. If the vehicle is too heavy, a camera automatically takes a picture of the license plate and sends the collected information to the local authorities, who will then fine the offending driver or logistics company.

Kistler says that Ukraine is not the first eastern European country to install its WIM technology on a large scale to reduce the number of overloaded vehicles. “We have been providing WIM systems for direct enforcement in countries like the Czech Republic, Russia and Hungary for several years now,” says Tomas Pospisek, regional manager for Eastern Europe within the Traffic Solutions business at Kistler Group.

Kistler specialises in piezoelectric sensors, a measurement technology that stands out for its longevity and accuracy even in tough conditions such as high temperatures or fast traffic. “Over the past 20 years, we have continuously made our products more and more accurate to enable direct enforcement. Now we can offer an accuracy around 2% with our KiTraffic Digital System,” says Pospisek.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • US pedestrian deaths fall but remain high
    June 27, 2024
    According to analysis from the Governors Highway Safety Association - GHSA – annual US pedestrian traffic deaths fell for first time since the pandemic, but are still above the pre-pandemic level.
  • All change: get ready to rethink everything
    November 10, 2022
    How can we make our infrastructure ready for new sustainability challenges? What kind of investments are needed? And who will finance them? Tolling association Asecap has some thoughts. Geoff Hadwick reports from Lisbon
  • Positioning tools continue to improve
    July 16, 2012
    Topcon says that its new IP-S2 package combines GNNS positioning capabilities with inertial sensors, while the firm also has a solution for customers wanting to mix and match receiver components. The IP-S2 is a vehicle-mounted, mobile 3D tool that offers precision mapping and surveying capabilities. The package collects data using 3D laser scanners, LIDAR, and/or cameras, and this is then integrated, time-stamped and geo-referenced. The customer can use this assembled data to combine LIDAR point cloud and d
  • Safety rallying call to English councillors after road death rise
    July 9, 2012
    English councils have been urged to protect the public on the roads by “whatever means is appropriate” after the first rise in road deaths in the country for eight years. Professor Stephen Glaister, director of the RAC Foundation, said data obtained by the Foundation under the Freedom of Information Act (FOI) showed there had been “no mass switch off” of speed cameras in England despite two years of Government road safety funding cuts. But Glaister fears an ageing national network of existing speed camera