Telematic control unit
A telematic control unit (TCU) in the automobile industry is the embedded system on board a vehicle that wirelessly connects the vehicle to cloud services or other vehicles via V2X standards over a cellular network. The TCU collects telemetry data from the vehicle, such as position, speed, engine data, connectivity quality, etc., from various sub-systems over data and control busses. It may also provide in-vehicle connectivity via Wifi and Bluetooth and implements the eCall function when applicable.
In the automotive domain, a TCU can also be a transmission control unit.
A TCU consists of:
- a satellite navigation (GNSS) unit, which keeps track of the latitude and longitude values of the vehicle;
- an external interface for mobile communication (GSM, GPRS, Wi-Fi, WiMax, LTE or 5G), which provides the tracked values to a centralized geographical information system (GIS) database server;
- an electronic processing unit;
- a microcontroller, microprocessor, or field programmable gate array (FPGA) which processes the information and acts as an interface to the GPS;
- a mobile communication unit;
- memory for saving GPS values in mobile-free zones or to intelligently store information about the vehicle's sensor data.
- battery module
See also
External links
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.