Skip to main content

Agreement reached on construction machine data standards

A new standard is being reached for construction and quarry machine data.
By MJ Woof February 4, 2020 Read time: 3 mins
An agreement has been reached on standardisation of data produced by construction and quarrying machines

An agreement has been reached on standardisation for data being produced by construction and quarrying machines. This was achieved at a general meeting of the Working Group Machines in Construction MiC 4.0 in Berlin. The agreement now takes the ISO 15143-3 international standard into the next phase. And MiC 4.0 paves the way for a quality assurance system.

The member companies first agreed on a uniform understanding of data  and the focus is now on construction process data. The common goal of this cooperation between manufacturers and users is to deliver a quality assurance system to guarantee a uniform standard for the construction industry.

The focus of the current 80 members is to establish the standards developed by MiC 4.0 in the market and to have them checked by a neutral authority. This requires a test centre for interfaces, conformity audits and certificates as proof. In coming months, the working group will work out concepts, examine the economic efficiency and search for suitable partners.

This standard relates to earthmoving machines, cranes, special civil engineering, road construction, concrete technology, building material plants and attachments. The participating companies have already agreed on the individual parameters for a uniform understanding of machine condition data. The results for the process data are to be determined in the course of this year.

This will be followed by the work of the Data Rights Working Group. However, it is a hot topic, as nobody can make a legal claim to data sovereignty. There are no specific laws that regulate the ownership of general machine data. At the moment, there is only the possibility to make contractual agreements which, for example, categorise the data, assign it to the contracting parties by licensing or create factual ownership through encryption and other technical measures.

The System Architecture Working Group deals with the requirements for communications. Standards for the structures, processes and symbols for operating mobile machines are defined by the Human Machine Interface HMI working group. Manufacturers, machine users and system integrators are continuously working on a coordinated industrial standard. This will be followed by a standardisation process.

The research project Building 4.0, funded by the Federal Ministry of Education and Research, is a joint project of 20 industrial partners and two universities - the Institute for Mechatronic Mechanical Engineering at the TU Dresden is the overall leader. Both universities presented the current state of research. They are working on the topics of automation and networking of working machines, 5G machine and construction site networking and solutions for digital processes on the construction site. The vision is to develop a completely digitalized, automated and flexibly adaptable construction site, with possibilities to simulate and optimize construction machinery and construction processes, to involve the operators as coordinators to increase efficiency and productivity and thus create new business models and value chains. The project will run until 31st July 2022 and is costing €9 million, of which €4.8 million euros is funded.

MiC 4.0 is an international consortium in cooperation with the VDMA and HDB. Companies, universities and research institutions can become members. Website: mic40.org

Related Content

  • Low Italian machine sales
    May 22, 2013
    The number of construction machines sold on the Italian market decreased by 36% in the first quarter of 2013 compared to the same period of 2012, according to Unacea, the association for Italian construction equipment attachment manufacturers. In Q1 2013, Unacea says 1,157 machines were sold domestically, of which 1,106 were earthmoving machines, 23 were road machines, and 28 were concrete machine/equipment sales. Moreover, according to the foreign trade monitor of the Construction Equipment Outlook publish
  • Vitronic’s 90 POLISCAN for Maryland
    November 16, 2022
    Conduent Transportation, a provider of automated transportation solutions, will use Vitronic’s LIDAR-based speed enforcement technology to improve road safety in the US state of Maryland.
  • Volvo CE’s mobile machine communications advance
    June 14, 2018
    Volvo CE is working on an innovative machine communications technology system. This development will help with the operation of autonomous machines, allowing remote control and operation even when equipment is in use as much as 400m underground. The aim of the development project is to boost safety, productivity and efficiency. The firm is using 5G communications technology in trials being carried out in partnership with communications specialist Telia. The trials are being run at a test facility in Eskils
  • Out with Russian bureaucracy, in with foreign road investment
    September 27, 2013
    Transport journalist Eugene Gerden reports on why foreign companies are likely to become keener to invest in Russia’s huge array of major road construction projects The Russian government led by president Vladimir Putin is stepping-up its efforts to get greater foreign company investment in Russian road building by creating favourable trading conditions, including the elimination of bureaucratic and administrative barriers.