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Toll Transponders

A number of states in the U.S. and other places around the world have installed electronic toll collection (ETC) systems which allow drivers to pay toll without having to stop. ETC means a huge safety advantage for riders, who no longer have to stop in the oily sludge that accumulates on the floor of toll booths.

ETC systems work by having a reader (usually large, rectangular device with a flat side facing incoming cars at an angle) with a couple of antennas in it installed over each lane. One antenna sends out a radio signal that causes a vehicle-mounted transponder to turn on, send some identifying information and go back to sleep. The other antenna receives the information and sends it back to a central system that manages your account. If your account has enough funds to pay the toll, the system tells the toll booth to allow you through.

This table lists known ETC programs:

Locality Program Web Site Transponder
United States
California Fastrak® (No. CA & parts of So. CA) http://www.bayareafastrak.org/ Unknown
Delaware*   http://www.ezpassde.com Mark IV Flat Pack
Florida E-Pass, O-Pass, SunPass http://www.expresswayauthority.com Unknown
Georgia Cruise Card   TransCore eGo
Illinois* I-Pass http://www.illinoistollway.com Mark IV Flat Pack
Kentucky     Mark IV Flat Pack
Michigan     Mark IV Flat Pack
New Hampshire*     Mark IV Flat Pack
New Jersey* E-ZPass http://www.ezpass.com Mark IV Flat Pack
New York* E-ZPass http://www.ezpassny.com Mark IV Flat Pack
Maine*     Mark IV Flat Pack
Maryland*     Mark IV Flat Pack
Massachussetts*     Mark IV Flat Pack
Pennsylvania*     Mark IV Flat Pack
South Carolina     Mark IV Flat Pack
Texas (Harris County) EZ Tag http://www.eztagstore.com Unknown
Virginia* Smart Tag http://www.smart-tag.com Mark IV Flat Pack
West Virginia*     Mark IV Flat Pack
Canada
Ontario Highway 407 ETR http://www.407etr.com Mark IV Fusion

U.S. states marked with an asterisk are part of the E-ZPass Alliance.

Transponder Makes and Models

Installation Considerations

Inside the transponder is a circuit board with, among other things, a small antenna etched into it:
markiv-innards.jpg

The transponder should be installed so there is a clear path between that antenna and the reader. There are three things that determine whether or not your transponder will be properly read when you ride through a toll lane:

  • Read Angle. The readers are mounted in such a way that the transponder is turned on and read ahead of your arrival in the lane. Ideally, you want to mount your transponder so the side you'd stick to your windshield is about parallel to the face of the reader. Next time you run through a lane, make a good mental note of the angle; that's what you want to shoot for. The adjustable windshield of an ST is not going to be a good candidate, because the upper half its range of motion isn't going to make for a good angle. Sitting flat in a tank bag isn't particularly good, either.

  • Material Between Transponder and Reader. Glass and most plastics are RF-transparent and don't pose much of a problem. The catch here is anything metal, which is going to absorb or scatter RF that hits it. Some paints (possibly the silver on the 2003s) have metal flakes that are fairly dense and may cause problems. Some window tints are semi-metallic and behave like metal foil. The top layer of the lettering on the Honda badge over the ST's headlight probably has some metallic content, so if you mount behind there, try to shoot for a spot where it isn't in the way. Some systems operate at 2.4 GHz, which is the resonant frequency of water, so any bodies (yours, passenger's) between the transponder and the reader will likely block the signal.

  • Battery Condition. This is the thing over which you have the least control. A fresh one will give you a good read at almost any angle because the return signal pretty much leaks out all sides. Most of that leakage drops off as the battery starts to drain, at which point a transponder not mounted in a good spot will appear flaky. Battery condition on a "new" tansponder is pretty much random, because you never know how long it sat on the shelf before you got it or if someone else had the transponder befrore you. MarkFeit reports that he installed a known-brand-new transponder when Virginia's Fastoll system opened in 1996 and got almost five years out of it at 20 uses per week. Its replacement worked for only two years under those conditions.

Permanent Installation

Upper Cowl

Most transponders should work mounted on the inside of the upper cowl, as shown here:

Where the tag goes

This location has been thoroughly tested with the Mark IV Flat Pack on the Dulles Toll Road in Virginia, and it works well. Larger transponders such as the Mark IV Fusion series will probably not fit in the space behind the cowl.

ALERT! Many toll authorities require that your transponder be visible as you ride through the toll facility. It may be worth keeping detailed pictures of your transponder (including whatever identifying information is on it) and the installation with your registration papers in case you're ever stopped and don't want to disassemble the nose of your bike to prove you paid your toll.

Saddlebag

The front part of a saddlebag at an angle facing the readers is another possibility. This may work, but probably not reliably. Odds are good that the rider (and almost definitely any passenger) will block the signal.

Some material in this topic was adapted from this thread at ST1300.US.

-- MarkFeit - 15 Apr 2005
Topic revision: r0 - 02 Jun 2009, MarkFeit
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