Skip to main content

Road monitoring tehcnology

Fugro Roadware says that its sophisticated Automatic Road Analyser (ARAN) data collection platform offers further functions with the development of the latest 9000 model. A product of two years of research and development, the new ARAN 9000 system has a 50% reduction in computing hardware over the previous model but offers the same functions, is fault tolerant, offers a plug and play system integration and uses a Windows-based operating system.
February 28, 2012 Read time: 2 mins
1169 Fugro Roadware says that its sophisticated Automatic Road Analyser (ARAN) data collection platform offers further functions with the development of the latest 9000 model. A product of two years of research and development, the new ARAN 9000 system has a 50% reduction in computing hardware over the previous model but offers the same functions, is fault tolerant, offers a plug and play system integration and uses a Windows-based operating system.

The new and more portable version features realtime sub-cm data synchronisation, sophisticated management software, interfaces in several languages, a user friendly operating system and a modular architecture supporting future upgrades. The latest version now features a database architecture with 1mm data synchronisation and comes with remote diagnostics tools. Designed for pavement management tasks, the ARAN system can determine longitudinal profile and roughness, transverse profile and rutting, surface macro texture and the surface distress rating. The equipment can also determine road geometry, edge drop-off, degree of curvature, radius of curvature and curve start and end coordinates. The system uses digital video technology and offers high resolution imagery with either single or multiple cameras and can log complete roadside asset inventories, while the data output can be formatted for subsequent import into a GIS or Asset Management software environment.

Fugro Roadware has installed the system in a Dodge Sprinter for its own fleet although the ARAN 9000 package can be installed on a range of different vehicles.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Concrete paving in Iceland
    October 3, 2022
    High-quality concrete paving has been achieved at an airport in Iceland by specialist contractor, HIB Iceland.
  • Efficient stockpile and site monitoring
    October 23, 2017
    Effective monitoring of aggregates stockpiles as well as face excavation can deliver greater quarrying efficiency. One of the latest innovations in quarrying is the use of drones, which provide major benefits for optimising operations. The use of affordable drone hardware and software solutions can help reduce stockpile inventory time by as much as 70%. Through the recent partnership between Trimble and Propeller, drone data can now be an everyday tool in quarries by proving a transformational impact
  • High-speed rutting detector
    February 29, 2012
    INO, a world-class centre of expertise in industrial applications for optics and photonics, offers its laser rut easurement system (LRMS), a transverse profiling device that detects and characterises pavement rutting. The organisation says LRMS can acquire full 4m width profiles of a highway lane at normal traffic speeds (up to 100km/hr), using two laser profilers that digitise transverse sections of the pavement.
  • Telematics agreement for construction machines
    December 8, 2015
    Major progress has been made with regard to construction machine manufacturers agreeing on a standard for telematics communications. This is of key importance to contractors running mixed fleets, as data transfer from equipment will now be much easier. This progress has come with a new construction equipment telematics standard from the Association of Equipment Manufacturers (AEM) and Association of Equipment Management Professionals (AEMP). This has added key features to allow data gathering, and a test da