Skip to main content

SICK launches 3D TIC502 LiDAR sensor system for traffic management

Sick says that its latest TIC502 twin LiDAR sensor system has high all-weather capability between -40OC and +60OC. The TIC502 incorporates vehicle speed detection with 3D profiling and counting of fast-lane, free flowing and static traffic to facilitate toll charge assessment. It can also be integrated with additional 2D LiDAR sensors to count axles for complete traffic profiling and assessment in a single system, according to the company that was set up in 1946 by optical engineer Erwin Sick in Waldkir
May 18, 2018 Read time: 3 mins
Sick says that its latest TIC502 twin LiDAR sensor system has high all-weather capability between -40OC and +60OC.


The TIC502 incorporates vehicle speed detection with 3D profiling and counting of fast-lane, free flowing and static traffic to facilitate toll charge assessment. It can also be integrated with additional 2D LiDAR sensors to count axles for complete traffic profiling and assessment in a single system, according to the company that was set up in 1946 by optical engineer Erwin 3316 Sick in Waldkirch, south-west Germany. From more than 50 locations worldwide, the company manufactures sensors, safety systems, machine vision, encoders and automatic identification solutions for factory, transportation and process automation.

Typical applications include electronic highway toll collection, traffic management and jam detection including tunnel, bridge and ferry operations, explained Neil Sandhu, Sick’s national product manager for imaging, measurement, ranging and systems.

“The unit can also be easily retrofitted on structures such as overhead gantries, bridges or tunnel entrances to upgrade existing traffic monitoring and control,” he said. “The facility for adding an extra LiDAR sensor to the TIC502 allows accurate axle counting, which is often used for improved toll assessment of very heavy transport vehicles, without needing the use of a full vision system.”

The TIC502 LiDAR system comprises twin LiDAR sensors on an angled baseplate for direct, over lane mounting and a TIC Traffic Controller for installation in the highway control room. The TIC502 Master LiDAR unit can be paired with the TIC502 Slave 2D LiDAR unit for axle counting duties using the same traffic controller. Up to four lanes can be monitored by one controller.

Based on infra-red Class 1 (eye-safe) LiDAR sensors, the TIC502 scans vehicles at up to 100 times a second to generate a 3D profile of each vehicle and assesses vehicle class according to TLS8+1, TLS5+1, TLS2+1 or Swiss10, into up to 30 different classes. The live 3D view of traffic is integrated into one, easy-to-use display, and is auto-calibrated with moving traffic.

The Sick TIC502 has a range of up to 40m and a minimum mounting height of 1.5m above the tallest vehicle. Vehicle counting accuracy is better than 99%, including vehicles with trailers, vehicle class assignment better than 98% and speed assessment accuracy is +/- 3kph up to 100kph and +/- 3% above 100kph.

With modular software and a web-based configuration and user interface, the TIC502 is easy to set up and operate, with the custom-designed installation wizard. No additional software is required for visualisation of vehicle data and the traffic controller automatically stores a data history of the last 50 vehicles detected. Data is sent directly to storage in the customer’s system via FTP or UNC transmission.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Bentley's iTwin Experience, Capture and IoT
    November 24, 2022
    Bentley Systems has launched iTwin Experience, iTwin Capture and iTwin IoT to improve the performance of its digital twin analysis platform iTwin.
  • Traffic monitored by Fabema
    February 10, 2012
    Fabema GmbH is offering a new and more sophisticated solution for monitoring traffic flows, with its FMC-N multi-functional control that can be used during traffic jams, allowing the user to monitor phase changes from a PC. The unit, for both temporary and stationary use, suits installations with traffic signal systems featuring up to 32 signal groups and 256 signal lamps.
  • Piling accurately with Trimble’s new tool
    June 10, 2019
    Trimble is offering a new system that can help to boost the quality of drilling and piling work. The firm’s new Groundworks Machine Control System has been developed as a streamlined machine control solution for drilling and piling operations that helps optimise productivity and quality. The firm claims that this highly sophisticated system allows contractors to carry out drilling and piling operations more quickly, safely and accurately than using conventional methods. “Engineered for ease of use, Trim
  • From managed asset to service provider: the future highway
    May 20, 2019
    Every day we hear about Mobility as a Service (MaaS), but what about Roads as a Service? Geoff Hadwick reports from the ERF in Brussels The familiar physical asset called the road will increasingly be seen as part of an emerging global services sector. Given that, the role of the road is changing, notes Christophe Nicodème, general director of the European Union Road Federation (ERF). We need to think much more carefully about planning highway infrastructure in terms of people’s needs, said Nicodème,