Skip to main content

Scania uses Navteq data for Active Prediction system

Navteq has been selected by Scania to provide map data featuring the accurate, reliable and detailed road attributes essential to its innovative new active prediction system.
March 1, 2012 Read time: 2 mins
3516 Navteq has been selected by 759 Scania to provide map data featuring the accurate, reliable and detailed road attributes essential to its innovative new active prediction system.

Scania has developed a topography based cruise control using Navteq map data which is transferred by a map engine developed by 3402 Continental. By anticipating the upcoming topography of the road, Active Prediction optimises fuel usage by adjusting the cruising speed before starting a descent or ascent, resulting in fuel savings of up to three per cent. The system is able to interpret features on the map, such as precise road geometry, road curvature and slope, and provide the relevant predictive information.

Scania's cruise control with Active Prediction offers maximum benefits on an undulating route where the road is never entirely flat with the major savings achieved by adjusting the speed before a downhill stretch. Less experienced drivers are likely to benefit the most, but highly skilled drivers will also benefit significantly on unknown routes, in the dark or under adverse weather conditions.

“The map data is stored in the Scania Communicator, which already incorporates GPS positioning, and the system interacts with the engine management system to control the speed of the vehicle,” explained Oskar Johansson, head of Engine Torque Control at Scania. “Highly accurate information on the road ahead is vital for this system to operate effectively and the technology used to develop Navteq data is leading the way in enabling next generation maps with attributes which move beyond navigation and support advanced driver assistance systems (ADAS) such as active prediction.”

Currently, Scania active prediction has full coverage of the Western and Central parts of Europe. In other areas or when the GPS signal is lost, the system reverts to a normal cruise control function. The map data is stored in the unit’s memory and can be updated by a Scania service workshop.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Brisbane’s Airport: Innovative Management of One of the World’s Busiest Runways
    June 26, 2014
    When it comes to runways, there are few busier then Brisbane’s main runway. Servicing both domestic and international travel, with over 200,000 movements per year, operating without a curfew Brisbane’s main runway is the busiest in Australia. For maintenance, crews only have a limited period of time to determine the pavement condition, normally during the night, making the detection of pavement faults difficult. To resolve this issue, a new high speed pavement scanner was used to rapidly survey the pavem
  • Bentley Systems is growing its portfolio of engineering solutions
    January 15, 2020
    New software advances from Bentley Systems as well as partnerships with Siemens and Topcon offer benefits for asset maintenance – Mike Woof writes
  • Doosan’s new asset management system
    September 8, 2021
    Doosan now offers a mobile app for its successful DoosanCONNECT TMS2.0 fleet and asset management system
  • Traffic management drives sustainability
    June 18, 2012
    New initiatives could boost transport sustainability – David Crawford writes. New roles are opening up for urban traffic management systems in helping city authorities to meet increasingly stringent governmental and supra-governmental air quality standards. European local authorities are typically tasked with both traffic management and pollution monitoring within their areas, making them well placed to draw on the latter to mitigate the impacts of the former.