Skip to main content

Vögele Edge Control has the edge

May 19, 2025 Read time: 2 mins
Vögele is automating numerous paver control functions, such as with AutoTrac

AutoTrac automatic steering and width control system for pavers can increase work safety and boost efficiency.

Meanwhile, the SUPER 1803-5 X is the first of Vögele's new generation wheeled pavers. In combination with the Dash 5 extending screeds AB 500 and AB 600, it offers operating widths of  2.55-8.25m and is said to be highly versatile. The powerful Universal Class representative of the new generation now combines the advantages of a wheeled paver - high manoeuvrability and great mobility during relocation - with the advantages of the Dash 5 machines: greater ease of operation, automated processes, shorter set-up times and low noise and exhaust emissions.

The firm says that AutoTrac is one example of how Vögele is automating numerous control functions. Other examples are the Vögele Edge Control guide wire follower, the fixed screed width, the new Edge Detection edge follower and the tried-and-tested Steering Control automatic steering system. Using various sensors and physical references, users can automatically control width and direction in this way.

With Smart Pave, Vögele is introducing the next level of automation. The integrated system controls the paving width, position and direction of the paver fully automatically using virtual references. Smart Pave uses verified installation geometries that have been stored in the digital platform, the John Deere Operations Center. The StarFire-Dual Antenna System determines the exact position of the paver, ensuring highly accurate control.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Mini pavers offer key performance benefits
    November 4, 2019
    Compact pavers are versatile machines that offer road repair capabilities – Mike Woof writes
  • Vögele Super 1803-3i wheeled paver rides high in the Swiss Alps
    December 18, 2017
    Asphalt paving is a challenge in the rough terrain of the Swiss Alps and nowhere more so than in the mountain village of Castiel. Extreme slopes, narrow roads and steep precipices place demands on the paving team and machinery. In the town of Castiel, in the Arosa district of the canton Graubünden, contractor HEW Bauunternehmung opted to use Vögele’s Super 1803-3i wheeled paver for rehabilitation of the combined base and surface course on a farm track. The site is around 1,200m above sea level and an
  • Asphalt paving innovations coming to market
    May 24, 2019
    Asphalt paver manufacturers are introducing new models, many of which are aimed at specific market needs – Mike Woof writes A range of new asphalt paver models are coming to market, with some having been developed specifically for certain markets. China’s demand for construction equipment has resulted in numerous firms developing machines just for this market for example. Customers in China have long favoured the European-style machines, featuring tamper bar screeds, over the machines with vibrating
  • In control, with advanced technology
    August 15, 2019
    Machine control technology continues to advance, with new systems offering contractors major gains in working efficiency The latest developments in machine control technology once again push the bar in terms of advancements. The latest systems allow contractors to work even more effectively and efficiently than before. Doosan has unveiled one of the first uses globally of 5G technology to remotely control construction and quarrying machines. The firm has coined the term ‘TeleOperation’ to describe the