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Auto Makers, Racing Teams Turn To GPS For Performance Testing Accuracy; Thales Navigation's DG14 GPS Board Powers Industry-Leading VBOX.


Business Editors/Automotive Writers

SANTA CLARA Santa Clara, city, Cuba
Santa Clara (sän`tä klä`rä), city (1994 est. pop. 217,000), capital of Villa Clara prov., central Cuba.
, Calif.--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Nov. 7, 2002

Automotive performance testing Performance Testing covers a broad range of engineering or functional evaluations where a material, product, or system is not specified by detailed material or component specifications: Rather, emphasis is on the final measurable performance characteristics.  - the art and science of measuring speed, acceleration, braking characteristics, cornering ability, and much more - is moving into a whole new world: the world of global positioning systems (GPS).

Long saddled with cumbersome arrays of stopwatches, fifth wheels and optical sensors, auto manufacturers, government testing agencies, even Formula One racing This article focuses on a specific subtopic of Formula One.

A Formula One race takes place over an entire weekend, with two free practice sessions on Friday, a practice session and a qualifying session on Saturday, and the race on Sunday.
 teams are turning to GPS technology to make their testing procedures more accurate, more comprehensive and dramatically more efficient.

A British company, RaceLogic, is leading the way with its VBOX (Video BOX) A hardware interface from Sony that attaches up to seven VCRs, videodiscs and camcorders to the serial port. Devices must have the Control-L (LANC) connector. , a powerful system that weds a DG14 GPS board and antenna from Thales Navigation This article or section is written like an .
Please help [ rewrite this article] from a neutral point of view.
Mark blatant advertising for , using .
 to a data logger, control circuits and sophisticated data conversion software to create a system that calculates a vehicle's velocity 20 times per second with a very high degree of accuracy.

High-speed microprocessors and a dedicated digital signal processor A digital signal processor (DSP) is a specialized microprocessor designed specifically for digital signal processing, generally in real-time computing. Characteristics of typical Digital Signal Processors
  • Designed for real-time processing
 (DSP (1) (Digital Signal Processor) A special-purpose CPU used for digital signal processing applications (see definition #2 below). It provides ultra-fast instruction sequences, such as shift and add, and multiply and add, which are commonly used in math-intensive ) monitor up to 12 satellites for maximum accuracy. Sophisticated algorithms reduce multipath errors and use instantaneous Doppler values from at least four satellites to measure velocity.

RaceLogic's first experience with GPS came five years ago, when it conducted studies for the British government on a concept car that would slow automatically when confronted with a speed limit reduction zone along a highway. RaceLogic used GPS along with its existing traction-control products to conduct the tests.

GPS performance testing comes of age

"Since then, I've kept an eye on the GPS world and followed developments in the field," said Julian Thomas, RaceLogic's owner. "I could see the potential of GPS, but I was also aware that the satellite signals available to non-military GPS users could give adequate accuracy for basic speed measurements, but not for the kind of positioning data needed for performance testing. When President Clinton eliminated Selective (i.e., military) Access to GPS signals in 2000, I could see that the greatly increased accuracy for civilian GPS users would have major ramifications ramifications nplAuswirkungen pl  for our business."

Thomas began investigating receivers for performance testing applications and came across the Ashtech DC-14 GPS board from Thales Navigation. "The board's capabilities were a revelation to me," he said. "Aside from its convenience and accuracy, it was the only system available that offered true 20 Hz update operation.

Perhaps the most important feature of VBOX, according to Thomas, is its efficiency. "It takes about 20 seconds to fit onto a car, compared to as much as an hour or two for the fifth wheel and optical sensor systems that have been the primary means of speed measurement up to now," he said. "For a manufacturer or race team or testing agency, that's significant. Instead of testing two or three cars in a day, now they can test 40 or 50."

For racing teams, accurate velocity and positioning data give managers and drivers valuable information about the effect that steering a particular course has on vehicle speed.

"VBOX lets us draw a totally accurate map of a race or test circuit, complete with the inside and outside edges of the tracks," Thomas said. "We can then chart a test vehicle's exact path around that circuit and overlay it on the course map."

The system also gives precise positioning data. That's important in many applications, including by tire manufacturers measuring tire wear and scrub in relation to a vehicle's lean on curves.

About RaceLogic

Headquartered in Buckingham, England, RaceLogic designs and manufactures high quality electronic parts for racing and road cars. Its Traction Control and VBOX systems are among the most sophisticated systems available. RaceLogic counts more than a dozen auto makers - including Ford, GM, Daimler Chrysler and Toyota -- among its clients, as well as 75 percent of the world's tire makers. Renault's Formula One racing team uses the system, and Ferrari's F1 team is expected to begin using VBOX in the near future. There are more than 270 VBOX systems in use around the world.

About the Thales DG-14 OEM (Original Equipment Manufacturer) The rebranding of equipment and selling it. The term initially referred to the company that made the products (the "original" manufacturer), but eventually became widely used to refer to the organization that buys the products and  Board

The Thales Navigation DG14 OEM Board is low-cost, new-generation sub-meter GPS/Beacon/Satellite Based Augmentation Systems (SBAS (Satellite-Based Augmentation System) See GPS augmentation system. ) receiver. It's an ideal solution for high-end integration, incorporating signals from SBAS such as WAAS (Wide Area Augmentation System) A system of earth stations and satellites that improves the tracking accuracy of the GPS navigation system to approximately 10 feet. , EGNOS (European Geostationary Navigation Overlay Service) A European system of earth stations and satellites that improves the tracking accuracy of the GPS and GLONASS navigation systems down to approximately 15 feet.  and MSAS (Multi-functional Transport Satellite-based Augmentation System) A Japanese system of earth stations and satellites that improves the tracking accuracy of the GPS navigation system down to approximately six feet.  and including an embedded Beacon receiver to provide sub-meter differential positioning. The DG14 can provide up to 20Hz precise three-dimensional positioning and raw data for real-time guidance and navigation.

About Thales Navigation

Thales Navigation is one of the world's leading developers and manufacturers of positioning, navigation, communications and guidance equipment with global operations throughout the U.S. and Europe. Thales Navigation markets its Magellan brand GPS solutions in the consumer electronics, recreation, and automotive markets, and its Thales Navigation GPS and GNSS (Global Navigation Satellite System) The European term for a global satellite-based radio navigation system. See Galileo.  professional products in the survey, GIS/Mapping, and OEM markets. Through its joint venture with Hertz, Thales Navigation has developed the Hertz NeverLost(R) vehicle navigation system. Thales Navigation's key innovations include the first U.S. commercial hand-held GPS receiver for positioning and navigation, and the first handheld GPS with industry standard Secure Digital Memory Card capabilities.

Thales Navigation, headquartered in Santa Clara, Calif., is a subsidiary of Thales, a leading professional electronics company headquartered in Paris, with activities in aerospace, defense and information technology and services. For more information, visit www.thalesnavigation.com.
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Copyright 2002, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

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Publication:Business Wire
Date:Nov 7, 2002
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