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Our Infrastructure Bureau
Mumbai, Oct 28: Compaq India along with Adtranz of Denmark has supplied a totally integrated and consolidated voice, video and data traffic management system (TMS) for the Western Railway.
The first phase of this Rs 28-crore project will be made functional between Churchgate and Bandra from August 1999 and the second between Bandra and Virar from April 2000. This system has been especially designed and supplied by Compaq Customs Systems Group (CCSG) to meet Western Railway's specific requirements.
The TMS is a part of the project awarded by WR to Adtranz, a joint venture between Asea Brown Boveri and Daimler Benz. Adtranz has selected CCSG to provide the Alpha-based servers, operating system, networking facilities and support services for the WR TMS. This will enable WR to dramatically streamline traffic flow, minimise bottlenecks and identify problems and failures on the Mumbai suburban rail network.
Adtranz director of information technology Preben Elnef told reporters that the TMS envisages real timedisplay of movement of all suburban trains at the central control at Mumbai Central, on an 8-metre long wall display using a "rear video projection system." The central control room will be managed by 8 WR personnel trained by Adtranz.
He said that the TMS also allows traffic controllers at Mumbai Central to quickly identify trains through a unique numbering system, assess the exact nature of problems and train failures and take remedial action. The new TMS will provide for introduction of indicators at Mumbai suburban stations that will simultaneously display several levels for updated passenger information concerning the actual arrival time of the next two trains on platforms instead of just the scheduled arrival time.
Elnef said that the TMS allows for conference calls between traffic controllers through the local access network. Controllers at all 28 boundary stations that fall within the jurisdiction of Mumbai Central will be able to monitor trains movements simply by keying in the number allocatedto any particular train. The automatic channel of information also encompasses a route setting system which facilitates smooth flow of traffic over the Mumbai suburban rail network.
Elnef said that his company was in talks with Central, Southern and Indian Railways for setting up similar systems.
Copyright © 1998 Indian Express Newspapers (Bombay) Ltd.
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This story was printed from Net Express located at http://www.expressindia.com. Net Express provides a portal to India, with news from The Indian Express and The Financial Express along with sites on travel and tourism, the entertainment industry, the power sector, the environment and much more.
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