Pay as You Drive

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Introduction

With the market penetration of telematics companies in the B2C segment being quite limited, this use case is a great platform for Telematics Service Providers to reach new target groups such as the owners of private vehicles. Pay As You Drive is a fairly well-known business model, which provides better risk management tools for insurance companies and better service quality and commercial conditions to the drivers willing to install GPS trackers and comply to road rules.

Solution description

This solution allows vehicles to be used in Pay As You Drive applications by retrieving the total driven distance, also known as odometer data directly from vehicle's CAN-BUS. Therefore, it is no longer necessary to obtain this value from GPS calculations. The accuracy of GPS calculations is suitable in most of the applications, but it still has some limitations – driving in tunnels and other locations where GPS signal is blocked might affect the overall value of a driven distance. Also, to calculate the total driven distance via GPS, a driver needs to enter the first value manually and synchronize it later. It might become a major administrative task. One of the most important features needed in Pay As You Drive applications is the ability to analyze a driver’s performance – harsh acceleration, harsh braking and harsh cornering. This can be analyzed with Overspeeding and Green Driving scenarios. Crash detection is another helpful scenario for insurance companies. It is a practical solution that collects and analyzes data right before the crash happened and during the crash. Even more, FMB003 has a unique feature providing a driver with both Real Fuel and Real Odometer data. It means you can read an actual odometer data from your vehicle dashboard now and get the correct data online.

What you need for a solution?

  • FMB003 to read the real odometer data from the vehicle dashboard via the vehicle’s OBD port.
Other devices that work with this solution: FMP100/ It has the advantage of simple installation.
  • Teltonika Configurator to set up FM device correctly for the solution.
  • FOTA WEB to remotely send the configuration to the device for cloud-based VIN decoding combined with OEM data requests database.
  • SIM card to access FOTA WEB and send data to the server by accessing the GSM network.

Installation

FMB003, our new generation ultra-small, plug and play OBDII tracker with the benefits of very fast and easy installation. Even end-users can install the device themselves. The new housing of FMB003 device is remarkably small which is advantageous in vehicles with limited space for GPS tracker installation.

Installing the OBDII device to the vehicle:

  • Find OBDII connector in your vehicle (Figure 1). if you need more accurate location, please visit Location of OBD plug.
  • Before connecting the device to the OBDII socket, make sure that ≥3A fuse is present on OBD connector power supply.
Figure 1. Most common OMBDII connector locations

Configuration

1. Prerequisites

  • The vehicle must be supported by the FMB003 device. How to learn? Please contact your Teltonika Sales Manager with the make, model and model year of your vehicle.
  • Turn the ignition ON.
  • FMB003 must get VIN from the vehicle (AVL ID: 256). If not? Check the section Common issues.
  • FMB003 must connect to FOTA WEB to get the OBD configuration for the vehicle. Please make sure the device configuration settings for FOTA WEB are correct.
  • FMB003 must get OBD OEM Total Mileage from the vehicle (AVL ID: 389). If not? Check the section Common issues.

2. Configuring scenario

  • Configure the APN in GPRS settings.



  • 2001 – APN
  • 2002 – APN username (No APN username > leave the field blank)
  • 2003 – APN password (No APN password > leave the field blank)




  • Configure the server in GPRS settings.


  • 2004 – Domain
  • 2005 – Port
  • 2006 – Data sending protocol (0 – TCP, 1 – UDP)



  • Enable Codec 8 Extended in System settings.


  • Parameter ID: 113 – Codec 8 Extended (0 – Codec 8, 1 – Codec 8 Extended)

AVL parameters greater than 255 (HEX 0xFF) require “Codec 8 extended” to be sent to the server. See here for more details.


  • Enable OBD Feature in OBD II settings.


  • Parameter ID: 40000 – OBD Feature (0 – Disable, 1 – Enable)




  • Select Auto for VIN Source in OBD II settings.


  • Parameter ID: 40005 – OBD Feature (0 – Auto, 1 – Manual)




  • Enable (i.e. set a Priority for) OEM Total Mileage in OBD II settings.


  • Parameter ID: 40430 – OBD Feature (Priorities: 0 – None, 1 – Low, 2 - High, 3 - Panic)



Quickstart: From default configuration to Pay As You Drive solution in one SMS:

<SMS Login> <SMS Password> setparam 113:1;40000:1;40005:0;40430:1


Please review other features to improve this use case:


Configuration changes also can be made via FOTA WEB or to some extent via FMBT Mobile application.

3. FMBT Mobile application

You can view the current status of the parameters including AVL ID: 389 - OBD OEM Total Mileage.

The application can also configure:





  • APN (APN, APN username, APN password)
  • Server (domain, port, data sending protocol)








4. Teltonika Data Sending Parameters

Teltonika Data Sending Parameter for OBD OEM Total Mileage is AVL ID 389 (Unit: km). You can get the current value from the vehicle with Ignition ON:

<SMS Login> <SMS Password> readio 389

Parsing information

1.Prerequisites

1.1. Open TCP/UDP port

1.2. Read Java parser first start guide

2. Parsing example

Unparsed received data in hexadecimal stream
00000000000000548E010000017CA68CAE50010F0E4D4D209A8D40005C00000B00000000000B000500EF0100F0010015

0300C8000025000004004238DD0043102F0044002800240340000201850003DC0C0186000000C8000000000100003C34

AVL Data Packet Part HEX Code Part
Zero Bytes 00 00 00 00
Data Field Length 00 00 00 54
Codec ID 8E (Codec 8 Extended)
Number of Data 1 (Number of Total Records) 01
Timestamp 00 00 01 7C A6 8C AE 50
Priority 01
Longitude 0F 0E 4D 4D
Latitude 20 9A 8D 40
Altitude 00 5C
Angle 00 00
Satellites 0B
Speed 00 00
Event IO ID 00 00
N of Total ID 00 0B
N1 of One Byte IO 00 05
1’st IO ID 00 EF (AVL ID: 239, Name: Ignition)
1’st IO Value 01
2’nd IO ID 00 F0 (AVL ID: 240, Name: Movement)
2’nd IO Value 01
3’rd IO ID 00 15 (AVL ID: 21, Name: GSM Signal)
3’rd IO Value 03
4’th IO ID 00 C8 (AVL ID: 200, Name: Sleep Mode)
4’th IO Value 00
5’th IO ID 00 25 (AVL ID: 37, Name: Vehicle Speed)
5’th IO Value 00
N2 of Two Bytes IO 00 04
1’st IO ID 00 42 (AVL ID: 66, Name: External Voltage)
1’st IO Value 38 DD
2’nd IO ID 00 43 (AVL ID: 67, Name: Battery Voltage)
2’nd IO Value 10 2F
3’rd IO ID 00 44 (AVL ID: 68, Name: Battery Current)
3’rd IO Value 00 28
4’th IO ID 00 24 (AVL ID: 36, Name: Engine RPM)
4’th IO Value 03 40
N4 of Two Bytes IO 00 02
1’st IO ID 01 85 (AVL ID: 389, Name: OBD OEM Total Mileage)
1’st IO Value 00 03 DC 0C
2’nd IO ID 01 86 (AVL ID: 134, Name: Trip Distance)
2’nd IO Value 00 00 00 C8
N8 of Two Bytes IO 00 00
NX of X Byte IO 00 00
Number of Data 2 (Number of Total Records) 01
CRC-16 00 00 3C 34

Server response: 00000001

Please see Codec 8 Extended for more information.

Demonstration on Platform

For TAVL Users:

* TAVL > Select Client
* Objects > Press "Filter" > Find Object
* Track > Choose dates > Press "Advanced" > Press "Show"
























Common issues

Issue How to check? What to do next?
The device is not configured to send OBDII parameters. Check the section Configuring scenario.
  • Make any necessary corrections in the configuration.
The vehicle's ignition is not turned ON. Send the following SMS/GPRS command to the device:
<SMS Login> <SMS Password> readio 239 (Values - “0”: Ignition OFF, “1”: Ignition ON)
  • Turn the ignition ON.
The vehicle does not support the OBDII protocol. Send the following SMS/GPRS command to the device with Ignition ON:
<SMS Login> <SMS Password> obdinfo
  • The device response of the p1-4 protocols consisting of data indicates that data is received.
Prot:6,VIN:WVWZZZAUZFW125650,TM:15,CNT:12,ST:DATA REQUESTING,P1:0xBFBFB993,P2:0x8007E019,P3:0xFED00000,P4:0x0,MIL:0,DTC:0,ID3,Hdr:7E8,Phy:0 
  • The device response of the p1-4 protocols consisting of zeros indicates that no data is received.
Prot:0,VIN:N/A,TM:10,CNT:0,ST:OFF,P1:0x0,P2:0x0,P3:0x0,P4:0x0,MIL:0,DTC:0,ID0,Hdr:0,Phy:0
VIN is not received. Send the following SMS/GPRS command to the device with Ignition ON:
<SMS Login> <SMS Password> obdinfo
  • The device response with VIN:<VIN> indicates that VIN is received.
Prot:6,VIN:WVWZZZAUZFW125650,TM:15,CNT:12,ST:DATA REQUESTING,P1:0xBFBFB993,P2:0x8007E019,P3:0xFED00000,P4:0x0,MIL:0,DTC:0,ID3,Hdr:7E8,Phy:0 
  • The device response with VIN:N/A indicates that no VIN is received.
Prot:0,VIN:N/A,TM:10,CNT:0,ST:OFF,P1:0x0,P2:0x0,P3:0x0,P4:0x0,MIL:0,DTC:0,ID0,Hdr:0,Phy:0
  • Configure VIN manually if vehicle does not return VIN.


<SMS Login> <SMS Password> setparam 40005:1 
<SMS Login> <SMS Password> setparam 40003:<VIN>
OBD OEM Total Mileage is not received.
Turn the ignition ON.
  • Configurator: Check if OEM Total Mileage (Parameter ID: 40430) is received in I/O settings.
  • Server: Check if OBD OEM Total Mileage (AVL ID: 389) is coming to your server.
  • SMS/GPRS command: Check with readio SMS/GPRS command. SMS command structure: <SMS Login> <SMS Password> readio 389
  • Contact your Teltonika Sales Manager with the make, model and model year of your vehicle.
  • Contact Teltonika support via VIP HelpDesk with the make, model and model year of your vehicle. Also share device response to obdinfo SMS/GPRS command with ignition ON.