Skip to main content

Sophisticated slipformer control from Wirtgen

Wirtgen is now offering a new version of its concrete slipformer control package. This new tool offers additional capabilities and improved performance over the earlier version. The company claims that its upgraded Wirtgen AutoPilot 2.0 package can deliver a higher paving accuracy along with lower costs. Newly-developed, this package is said to produce a wide array of offset and inset profiles, while also delivering these more economically and precisely than with the previous version. The 3D system can eit
August 10, 2018 Read time: 4 mins
The system allows users to slipform complex layouts easily, according to the firm
Wirtgen is now offering a new version of its concrete slipformer control package. This new tool offers additional capabilities and improved performance over the earlier version.


The company claims that its upgraded 2395 Wirtgen AutoPilot 2.0 package can deliver a higher paving accuracy along with lower costs. Newly-developed, this package is said to produce a wide array of offset and inset profiles, while also delivering these more economically and precisely than with the previous version. The 3D system can either use an existing data model or can be used to generate a new, digital data model at the site.

Wirtgen supplies the AutoPilot 2.0 for the models SP 15/SP 15i and SP 25/SP 25i, while the system can also be retrofitted to machines already in use by customers.

Typical applications for the AutoPilot 2.0 system are for making concrete safety barriers, kerbs, traffic islands or for road surfaces with a width of up to 3.5m. The 3D control package comprises a computer integrated into the machine and a tablet attached to the Field Rover survey pole. Two GPS receivers are mounted on the machine and these communicate with a GPS reference station at the job site. The satellite-based navigation system (GNSS) controls the steering and cross slope of the slipform paver fully automatically. All that is needed is the reception of a sufficient number of satellites and an operator trained to handle the system. A key benefit is with surveying time as there is no need to set up, dismantle or maintain string lines. In addition, paving crews no longer need to take care working around a string line, which can be easily damaged.

Removing the string lines also means that the concrete mixers have more space for manoeuvring, making it easier to supply the slipform paver with material. There is also no need to generate a geodetic data model in advance and overall, works can be carried out more quickly and efficiently according to the firm.

Users can use the system to generate a virtual string line themselves on the job site with the intuitive software on the tablet. The design of the system means that users have two different methods to choose from. One option is for the user to import data from an existing 3D model onto the tablet and the package is designed so that it allows compatibility with other software types. The second option allows the user to plot the stretch to be paved with the Wirtgen Field Rover survey pole. The user then uses these plots to define individual measuring points. An important feature of the system is that the generating computes the optimum course on the basis of the measuring points, creating a virtual string line. However existing objects such as water inlets, lighting or road signage can be taken into account and the virtual string line modified as required.


The software also features tools that can be used in a similar way as setting up a conventional string line. To achieve the best paving quality, the software automatically tests the imported or newly created data for kinks affecting steering and height control and displays these on the tablet. The user can then correct unwanted kinks in the model data by rounding them with a few simple steps on the touchscreen using graphic editors.

After quality testing, the tablet is connected to the machine control of the slipform paver and the design generated is put into the machine’s control system. The concrete paver then starts on its own at the specified starting point and progresses automatically along the predefined course.

The firm claims that the simplicity of the system means that users are able to create designs, check data and pave complex layouts in a short time, using the tablet. Existing objects on the job site can be included quickly and easily into the data. Meanwhile, users retain full control and can intervene in the autonomous paving process at any time.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Machine control technology allows more efficient paving
    March 3, 2015
    In the US, a specialist contractor is making savings with new 3D technology for concrete paving. US contractor Gehring Construction is a specialist in concrete paving and is a long-time customer of GOMACO. Having bought its first GOMACO unit in 1973, Gehring has a good deal of experience in this segment. The company is now using some of the latest machine control technology, having bought a Topcon Millimetre GPS 3D stringless system, which has been used on a bypass project around the US city of Colombus. T
  • Concrete paving job for Wirtgen machines in Nigeria
    May 14, 2018
    Concrete paving equipment from Wirtgen has been used to slipform a concrete road surface in south-west Nigeria Anew concrete roadway connects the towns of Itori und Ibese in Nigeria’s Ogun State. The construction work has been carried out by AG-Dangote Construction Company and made use of the sophisticated technology offered by Wirtgen’s SP 500 slipform paver. For this project, the contractor, a joint venture between the Brazilian company Andrade Gutierrez Company and the Dangote Group from Nigeria, rel
  • Optimising operations with construction software gains
    May 20, 2015
    Innovations in construction software are helping boost project efficiency and optimising project operations – Clive Davidson writes Over the past decade, while construction engineers have been putting up buildings or infrastructure, software engineers have been developing a parallel universe where virtual buildings or infrastructure can be created in ever increasing detail. What started with 2D architectural drawings in computer-aided design (CAD) systems, has become a multi-dimensional world, with 3D ge
  • Two German autobahns benefit from new Wirtgen concrete slipforming technology
    November 15, 2013
    Two important routes in Germany, the A9 and A6 autobahn highways, have benefited from the use of the latest Wirtgen slipforming machines. The A9 is a particularly important route in Germany as this 529km link connects capital Berlin with the southern city of Munich, running through Brandenburg, Saxony-Anhalt, Saxony, Thuringia and Bavaria.