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

  • Paving tight corners on a racetrack
    May 12, 2021
    Vögele SUPER 1303-3i pavers have been used with great success on a challenging job site in Hemer, in Germany’s North-Rhine Westphalia. The machines were used in the construction of a new karting track. The contractor employed Vögele equipment for this project, paving tight bends over a length of 391.5m.
  • New industry developments push boundaries of machine control
    May 22, 2014
    A series of innovations in machine control or automation technologies are helping transform the construction industry - Mike Woof writes Equipment manufacturer have made huge advances in machine performance, delivering new models that offer increased capabilities and productivity, while using less fuel. Reliability and uptime too have been improved, with the development of equipment that can forestall unplanned downtime by telling the user when it will require service attention. Meanwhile new engines delive
  • Boom in African road construction projects
    February 22, 2012
    Huge investments are being made in major road construction projects for North Africa. The biggest is the 'Autoroute Transmaghrébine' highway, which is also Africa's largest ever road construction project. Once complete, the highway will connect the Maghreb states of Morocco, Algeria, Tunisia and Libya and will have a total length of 3,200km.
  • Surface quality a key trend in asphalt paving
    March 7, 2012
    Improved surface quality and improved machine design are key trends in the asphalt paving sector, Mike Woof reports There is a big difference in asphalt paving techniques in North America and Europe. In North America, the need to construct long stretches of highway quickly resulted in wide pavers offering high throughput capacity, with compaction equipment then being used to achieve the required density of the various courses. In Europe's highway construction projects, distances tend to be shorter and contr