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Kiosk
Products
Gordon-Darby has developed
and implemented many technical advances in pursuit of our corporate goal of
being the premier I/M contractor. This includes a number of kiosk-type products
aimed at improving the delivery of decentralized vehicle emissions and waiver
issuance services. Specific Gordon-Darby kiosk products include:
Self-Serve
OBD Kiosk:
Gordon-Darby has patented a self-serve OBDII kiosk concept that is designed for
use by either motorists (in performing their own OBD emissions inspections) or
relatively untrained attendants (in performing assisted serve inspections on
motorist vehicles).
The Gordon-Darby OBDII kiosk provides visual and auditory prompts
that are designed to walk motorists or inspectors through complete OBD
inspections. Such kiosks could be deployed in various arrangements, including:
·
Contracting with
Gordon-Darby to deploy, maintain and oversee an areawide network throughout the
program area.
·
Licensing private
business (e.g., typical vehicle repair shops, gasoline stations, mini-marts,
etc.) to oversee self- or assisted-serve test kiosks supplied and maintained by
Gordon-Darby.
Remote Inspection
Monitoring System (RIMS™):
Gordon-Darby developed and trademarked the RIMS™ test technology, which involves
remote oversight of OBDII kiosk inspections conducted in either decentralized or
centralized inspection networks, and data exchange between the remote test
kiosks and a centralized database. Using the RIMS™ inspection
process / technology, inspection results (including a digital video display of the
inspection as it is being performed) are transmitted via any of several possible
communications networks (e.g., the Internet, leased phone line, dedicated phone
line, satellite connection, etc.) to a central database and oversight location.
The inspector or motorist follows the prompts displayed on the
hand-held unit to conduct the RIMS™ inspection, including the following
inspection elements:
·
Initial entry of
any required vehicle information. The inspector/motorist is prompted to scan
and/or train the video camera incorporated into the unit on both the vehicle
license plate and barcoded VIN. (Barcode scanners are typically used for this
purpose, but recent technological advances
have
made it now feasible to capture the barcode on video and then decode it using
available
software.)
·
Connection of the
OBDII connection cable to the vehicle diagnostic link connector (DLC). The
mobile computing unit then performs the required on-board diagnostic system.
··
Disconnection of
the OBDII cable, which would be followed by display of the inspection results.
A series of “close-up”
digital photographs is taken during the inspection. Each close-up photo also
triggers an overhead photograph. The entire dataset (OBDII results and digital
photographs) is then transmitted to the central database and remote overview
location. Test supervisors monitor, review, and approve in-progress testing in
real-time prior to the completion of the inspection, thereby providing an
effective means to detect and deter so-called clean scanning. The data is also
retained for audit purposes.
A
relatively small number of supervisors can observe a large number of tests. In
addition to observing and reviewing vehicle tests, they can provide assistance
in conducting inspections. This latter element would parallel the “lead
inspector” concept that is typically used to improve inspection performance in
conventional centralized programs. An enhanced audit mode built into the RIMS™
software also allows the use of streaming video.
The RIMS™ approach combines
the motorist convenience of decentralized inspections with a level of oversight
similar to that found in centralized inspection networks, thus combining the
best features of both networks. It also has considerable flexibility and can be
readily adapted to other test environments. For example, the same approach
could be used in centralized inspection facilities to eliminate possible test
fraud.
Drive-Thru
Waiver/Exemption Service Kiosk:
This stand-alone kiosk is designed to deliver superior customer service in the
issuance of program waivers, exemptions or extensions. Kiosk service personnel
would be available during normal operating hours to provide drive-thru or
walk-up service to motorists, thus allowing motorists to remain in their
vehicles or avoid having to stand and wait in a service center line for
assistance. Such kiosks can be located in the parking lots of vehicle
registration agency offices or alternatively in high traffic commercial parking
lots for increased customer convenience.
Interactive Self-Serve Exemption/Extension Kiosks:
This ATM-style self-serve kiosk is designed to be located at vehicle
registration agency office locations to allow motorists to complete needed
exemption and extension transactions during all business hours when the offices
are open. Each kiosk would be linked via the web to a centrally located
full-time attendant who can provide as needed help to users in completing their
transactions. The kiosks are designed to accept and copy all required
documentation, with images of the documentation transmitted via the web and
stored on the central program VID.
As the industry leader in kiosk
development, Gordon-Darby continues to pioneer new and innovative
developments—all aimed at making the inspection process more user friendly,
faster and more consistent for motorists.
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