Subscribe to RSS feed. Follow us on Twitter.

Search for News

Polls

To control costs this year does your fleet intend to do any of the following? (select up to two of your most widely used measures)

View Results

Newsletter

Receive the latest news direct to your Inbox! Simply enter your email address below to sign up for our weekly newsletter.

Archive

Show archives | Hide archives

Pages

Show pages | Hide pages

News Categories

Show categories | Hide categories

Skoda Yeti contract hire and leasing deals

Meta

1000s of fleet industry links
Essential for fleet managers and company car drivers

Vehicle Tracking technology challenges speed cameras

A driver has successfully challenged a speeding ticket thanks to vehicle tracking technology installed in his van.

Gareth Powell was clocked doing 61mph in a 50mph limit on A4174 near Bristol in November last year, while he was working as an employee of MD Building Services Ltd.

Gareth doubted the alleged offence and contacted Navman Wireless, the UK’s largest provider of vehicle tracking*, to discover if the company could clarify the precise speed he’d been driving at when the incident occurred.

Vehicle tracking records proved that his Ford Transit Connect van had in fact been travelling at 48mph.

“I’m an extremely careful driver and was certain I hadn’t broken the law,” he said.

“It was a great relief when Navman Wireless could confirm that I’d been driving within the speed limit and it gave me the confidence I needed to contest the Notice of Intended Prosecution.

Gareth was clocked by the LTI 20-20 speed gun on November 28, 2008. The case was dismissed by the District Judge at Bath & Wansdyke Magistrates Court on Friday October 30.

“The GPS fix on Gareth’s vehicle from the tracking system was excellent when he was clocked by the speed gun,” said Navman Wireless IT director Barry Neill, who attended court as an expert witness.

“On this occasion, the Dilution of Precision (DOP) value was one – in other words the eight satellites locating his vehicle were advantageously positioned. Under good conditions, GPS tracking technology is accurate to within three metres.”

Gareth added: “Had it not been for the Navman Wireless vehicle tracking, and the company’s superb technical support, I would currently have three points on my drivers licence and would have ended up paying a £60 fine. I would have had no way of proving my speed and therefore would have been forced to accept the charge.”

Navman Wireless vehicle tracking enables business users to track, message and monitor their fleet from almost any PC at any location, providing vital information about companies’ workforces and mobile assets.

Author: Lee Sibbald, November 13, 2009
Filed under: Fleet news,Navman Wireless

No comments yet »

No comments yet.

RSS feed for comments on this post.

Leave a comment

Related posts