We
hear plenty about Google’s self-driving cars. They’re completely
autonomous: Once you’ve plugged in your destination, you can, in theory,
read or take a nap while the car drives. But Google’s cars are
experimental. You can’t buy one.
What we hear less about are the self-driving cars that you can buy today. So far, they’re not fully
autonomous, like Google’s. You’re required to keep at least one hand on
the wheel while driving. In this regard, they’re strictly a stopgap
between today’s cars and the fully self-driving models of 2020 or so.
The main things these cars can’t do on their own: making turns and changing lanes. (The one exception: With a $2,500 software upgrade, recent Tesla S models can now change lanes automatically when you turn on your turn signal on a highway).
But today’s cars can automatically steer (to stay in the lane), accelerate, brake, and park, either parallel or back-in.
Last
week, Yahoo Autos invited me to join their judging panel for the Yahoo
Autos Ride of the Year competition. Over the course of several days in
Detroit, we tested, drove, and discussed 22 new 2016 car models.
Yahoo
Autos will reveal the results in November. But I was so amazed by the
degree of sophistication in these cars’ self-driving features, I thought
I’d write up my reactions now.
The
features here are available only on expensive cars, as an expensive
option; they usually require an options package that costs around
$2,000. They’ll inevitably trickle down to more affordable cars over
time.
Adaptive Cruise Control
Cruise
control has been around for years: You turn it on, and the car
maintains a speed that you’ve set, so you don’t have to keep the gas
pedal pressed all the time.
In retrospect, it’s amazing that this feature ever became standard. If you think about it, it’s dangerous. The car is accelerating blind. If you’re not careful, you’ll plow right into a car that’s slowed or stopped ahead of you.
But adaptive cruise control is very different. Now, your car watches the
car ahead. It still tries to maintain your chosen highway speed (say,
65 miles an hour), but slows down as necessary to avoid hitting a car
ahead of you—and then speeds back up again automatically.
The
car’s ability to “see” ahead of it lies in a bulky box behind the
rear-view mirror or built into the front grille, depending on whether
it’s laser- or radar-based.
So
how much of a gap does your car leave between you and the guy ahead of
you? That’s up to you. A control on the steering wheel lets you cycle
between three degrees of separation distance.
Adaptive
cruise control is fantastic and very polished. I let a 2016 Honda CR-V
drive itself almost all the way to the Detroit airport, and the thing
never missed. Once, a car in front of me stopped short. The Honda braked
hard and fast, yet without a sudden jerk. Collision avoided.
Auto-Stop-and-Go
On
most cars, you can use adaptive cruise control only over, for example,
40 miles an hour. A few, though, offer something truly mind-blowing: a
similar feature that works all the way down to zero miles an hour.
This
feature has various names—on the Volvo XC90, for example, it’s called
Pilot Assist; on the Mercedes S-class it’s called Stop-N-Go Pilot. But
the idea is the same in each case: The car can drive itself when you’re
inching along in stop-and-go traffic. It’s cruise control for traffic
jams.
This
is another prize-winning feature. Nothing can completely take the
frustration out of traffic. But knowing that your car is handling the
brake and accelerator, smoothly and efficiently, at least makes it feel
like someone (or something) is on your side.
Lane Assist
With
one press of a button on the steering wheel, these cars can do
something else rather amazing: They can stay in the current lane. If you
start to drift outside of the lines, they either alert you, steer
automatically back into the lane, or both. (On the Audi TT and Ford
Edge, the steering wheel vibrates in your hands to get your attention,
for example.)
This
feature isn’t as rock-solid as the adaptive cruise stuff. A couple of
times, the Volvo drifted over the white line at the right side of the
road without correcting itself. (This was a deserted rural Michigan
road. The white line was clear enough to me, but the problem may have
been that there wasn’t much pavement to the right of the white line.)
The
Mercedes GLE350 4Matic had the opposite problem. It was smart enough to
ease back into the lane when I drifted over the right white line—but
not the yellow center line.
Most
cars, moreover, don’t stay in the lane if the road curves more than a
few degrees. (One exception: The Honda Pilot. It’s a master of staying
in its lane, both sides, even if the road bends.)
An
important lesson here: Lane correction doesn’t work well enough that
you can relax. It might even lull you into a sense of confidence, but in
fact, you need to pay just as much attention as you do when driving
unassisted.
As the Mercedes manual puts it: “DISTRONIC PLUS can neither reduce the risk of accident nor override the laws of physics.”
Parking Assist
How’s
this for a crazy breakthrough? You press a button on your
dashboard—once for parallel parking, twice for head-in parking. Now, a
message on the screen tells you to drive forward slowly; as you move,
cameras on the side of the car look for a parking space.
When
it finds a spot, the screen tells you to stop and put the car in
reverse. As you inch backward, the steering wheel wildly turns by
itself, as though manipulated by a ghost. Eventually, you’re instructed
to stop and put the car into Drive again, then into Reverse again, and
so on, until you’re neatly parked.
Oddly,
all the car does for you is steer. You’re expected to do the braking,
shifting, and accelerating. (I’m not complaining—just mystified, since
the car is perfectly capable of monitoring obstacles and its own speed.)
There
is a huge variation in the competence of this auto-parking business.
Some cars I tested, like the Chevy Malibu and Camaro, usually did a
pretty terrible job at parking. Often, I’d be midway through the
procedure, having obeyed the instructions perfectly, and the car would
simply give up with a “PARKING FAILED” message. OK, car—but weren’t you the one who decided that you could pull it off to begin with?
Those
cars are looking, I’m guessing, for other parked cars, not for the
painted lines of the parking spot. That would explain why, in one
parking lot, it expertly guided itself squarely onto the dividing line
between two spots.
I had better luck with some other car brands, but none was perfect.
Situational Awareness
External
sensors are a hallmark of the new generation of cars. Not just the
windshield laser array described above, but also external cameras that
some cars have all the way around.
These
cameras and sensors are essential elements in the self-driving
features, of course. But they also make possible all kinds of useful new
ways to keep you aware. For example:
* Overhead view.
Using clever image-stitching software, the car can combine the images
from all of the external cameras into what seems to be an aerial view of
your car and its surroundings:
* Forward-collision alert. If
the car determines that you might hit the car in front of you, you get a
beep and flashing icon. (Some cars also tighten your seatbelt and
pre-charge your brakes.)
* Blind-spot alert.
If you’re about to change lanes, and there’s another car in your
mirror’s blind spot, you get a beep and a flashing light in the mirror.
* Lane-drift alert. Even
if a car doesn’t have the “keep you in your lane” feature, it may be
able to beep, flash, or vibrate the steering wheel to warn you.
* Cross-traffic alert. This
one kicks in when you’re backing up. The car can spot a car that might
hit you, coming from the side; it beeps and flashes an alert to let you
know.
You
can turn all of these things off, but it’s hard to think of a reason.
If you’re driving safely and all is well, you’ll never know these alarms
are there. But when the time comes, those beeps and flashes may save
your car—or your life.
Co-Driving
When
fully self-driving cars finally arrive—within five years, most experts
guess—you’ll be able to nap, read, eat, or watch videos while you drive.
You
might expect that these halfway-there cars might mean that you can
therefore pay attention to driving only half as much. Or at least a
little bit less.
That’s not the case. The kind of
attention you have to pay does shift—for example, you can relax a
little about rear-ending the car in front of you. But in my days of
helping these cars drive, I learned that these assistive features only
morph your driving skills, not replace them.
The
car makers know that, too. That’s why, even when the car is managing
highway (or stop-and-go) driving and lane-keeping, you’re still required
to keep at least one hand on the wheel. If you don’t, beeps and
messages get angry at you.
What Self-Driving Means
I already know what a lot of people will say when they’re offered these features: “I like to drive! I don’t want some computer driving for me!”
Understood. They’re optional. You don’t have to buy them, and you don’t have to turn them on.
But
the advantages of self-driving cars are enormous. Think about those
tens of millions of aging baby boomers whose years of mobility can be
extended. Think about the fuel consumption and traffic that can be
avoided by smarter, safer cars.
Above
all, think of the accidents and deaths that can be avoided. According
to the latest statistics, 100 percent of car accidents are caused with people behind the wheel. We are, as a species, terrible drivers. We get bored and distracted. Worldwide, we crash 10 million times a year, and kill 1.3 million people.
The
self-driving features that enhance our safety, like adaptive cruise
control, blind-spot warnings, and cross-traffic alerts, are brilliant
advances. They work. They avoid accidents. The Insurance Institute for
Highway Safety found that an automatic front-collision braking feature
alone cuts crashes by 15 percent.
True,
we’re living in the Commodore 64 era of self-driving cars, where
self-driving features are expensive, limited, and not always perfect.
Years from now, we’ll chuckle at how quaint these transitional efforts
were.
But
all technology takes time to ripen. And even the semi-autonomous car
models of 2016 will strike most people as pretty magical.
This post was originally post on yahootech
0 comments:
Post a Comment
What's On Your Mind?