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  • Car Talk

    Automakers Rethink Seats for Self-Driving Cars

    By JIM MOTAVALLI


    The Mercedes F 015 Luxury in Motion concept car features what the company describes as “four rotating lounge chairs that allow a face-to-face seat configuration.” In other words, the driver (and front passenger, too) can swivel around and make direct eye contact with the people in the back.

    A 3-D Printed Car, Ready for the Road





  • #2
    Re: Car Talk
    “Federal safety rules won’t allow swiveling seats like that because of positioning with the airbags,” said Sam Abuelsamid, senior research analyst at Navigant Research. “And the driver has to be attentive to what is going on and ready to take the wheel if automated systems fail.


    I seriously doubt this will be a practical solution to automated system failure. For us aging Baby Boomers I expect the best thing about a "driverless" car is being able to sleep at the wheel

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    • #3
      Re: Car Talk

      Originally posted by GRG55 View Post
      “Federal safety rules won’t allow swiveling seats like that because of positioning with the airbags,” said Sam Abuelsamid, senior research analyst at Navigant Research. “And the driver has to be attentive to what is going on and ready to take the wheel if automated systems fail.


      I seriously doubt this will be a practical solution to automated system failure. For us aging Baby Boomers I expect the best thing about a "driverless" car is being able to sleep at the wheel
      LOL! It's true for me.

      When machines drive cars I expect traffic congestion and delays to drop dramatically.
      Way back in the 90's our group did work towards what back then was called "intelligent vehicle highway systems", IVHS.
      Traffic and transportation communities across the world were investigating, writing papers, and holding conferences.

      http://ntl.bts.gov/lib/jpodocs/repts_pr/1823.pdf

      The mundane stuff was programmable display signs on freeways that could give real time info about traffic ahead, traffic lights that coordinated timing, and lanes that change direction to carry morning rush traffic inbound and evening rush traffic outbound.

      The blue sky stuff back then imagined self-driving cars on high-speed highways.
      Most people liked the concept of cars communicating with each other and the roadway on two levels.
      At a macro level, cars and roadways exchanging info about their desired destination and routes so they could group up in small "pods" that would travel long distances together.
      At a micro level, cars sharing real-time sensor information and decision making to operate the car.

      Your car would chat to the roadway to help time traffic lights when you leave your office, merge onto a highway, and ease into tight formation with a handful of others going your route.
      That pod of cars would drive very close together, very fast, way beyond human capability. Maybe eight or twenty cars going 150 mph only a few inches apart.
      All cars in your pod constantly sharing info from on-board radars and sonars to avoid collisions and maneuver together, and coordinating with other pods to open gaps for lane changes.

      When you get to your exit, your car would depart the pod, and coordinate with the local surface streets and surrounding cars to make lane changes and coordinate lane crossing maneuvers.

      Back then this was essentially science fiction.
      Today we have cheap gigahertz computers and fully developed digital communications links.
      It's pretty much inevitable we will creep into self-driving cars that work like this, and traffic jams will become unusual.
      Last edited by thriftyandboringinohio; January 17, 2015, 01:12 PM.

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      • #4
        Re: Car Talk

        For us aging Baby Boomers I expect the best thing about a "driverless" car is being able to sleep at the wheel


        ​and drive at night . . .

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        • #5
          Re: Car Talk

          I would love a self-driving car but having had the habit of defensive driving drilled into me as a kid I'll never give up my hypervigilance. The more complex the system the more fragile it is, IMO.

          The thought of lying down and sleeping while a car drives itself gives me the willies! If all the vehicles on the road were communicating with each other, speeding along together with only inches between them that'd be great, but I'd be worried about a power grid or computer failure making it all go kablooey. Can you imagine the carnage at rush hour?

          Anybody here ever read Heinlein's "The Roads Must Roll"?

          Be kinder than necessary because everyone you meet is fighting some kind of battle.

          Comment


          • #6
            Re: Car Talk

            Originally posted by shiny! View Post
            ...Anybody here ever read Heinlein's "The Roads Must Roll"?
            Yes, Shiny, I love that story. I might have read every short story that Heinlein and Silverberg ever wrote - as a boy I read every short story science fiction anthology in our small town library.
            .
            .
            .

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            • #7
              Re: Car Talk

              Originally posted by thriftyandboringinohio View Post
              Yes, Shiny, I love that story. I might have read every short story that Heinlein and Silverberg ever wrote - as a boy I read every short story science fiction anthology in our small town library.
              Cool! I still have a decent collection of old Sci-Fi anthologies on the bookshelf.

              I'd rather see more fluid, more sophisticated mass transit systems (short range, long range, slow and fast) than millions and millions of individual cars that all have to be synchronized.

              Be kinder than necessary because everyone you meet is fighting some kind of battle.

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              • #8
                Re: Car Talk

                Originally posted by shiny! View Post
                Cool! I still have a decent collection of old Sci-Fi anthologies on the bookshelf.

                I'd rather see more fluid, more sophisticated mass transit systems (short range, long range, slow and fast) than millions and millions of individual cars that all have to be synchronized.
                "internet of things" should probably find a way of creating instant mass customised point to point transportation.

                Maybe an Uber on steroids.

                There's Uber car, maybe Uber Van, Uber Bus, Uber Transport Subscribtion

                Im thinking Amazon Prime-like "all you can eat" local transport(maybe throttled).

                There's still a lot of under-utilised transport capacity and efficiency that can be squeezed, maybe with more Internet of things meets Google Maps meets Uber meets Amazon Prime.

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                • #9
                  Re: Car Talk

                  Originally posted by lakedaemonian View Post
                  "internet of things" should probably find a way of creating instant mass customised point to point transportation.

                  Maybe an Uber on steroids.

                  There's Uber car, maybe Uber Van, Uber Bus, Uber Transport Subscribtion

                  Im thinking Amazon Prime-like "all you can eat" local transport(maybe throttled).

                  There's still a lot of under-utilised transport capacity and efficiency that can be squeezed, maybe with more Internet of things meets Google Maps meets Uber meets Amazon Prime.
                  Mass transportation and ride sharing is easier in dense population areas like San Francisco. Doesn't work so well in large, spread out areas.

                  The San Francisco metropolitan area is 3,524 sq. miles. The Phoenix metropolitan area is 14,566 sq. miles. In SF, busses run every 5-7 minutes during rush hour, and bus stops are every couple of blocks. Busses in the Phoenix metro area are few and far between. People commute 30+ miles each way, living in one city and working in another. Busses and trains just can't cover all the areas sufficiently.

                  I see big, mostly empty busses on the streets of my city. They work for some people, but there is no mass-transit way for the majority of people who live in bedroom communities to commute to work. Wouldn't it be more efficient to use circulating vans that pick people up and drop them off at neighborhood stops as school busses do, then small busses can take them intermediate distances, then large busses or rapid transit trains can take them on the long commutes across town?

                  Maybe someday we'll have synchronized electric mass transit vehicles moving people on solar powered roads

                  Solar Roadways

                  Be kinder than necessary because everyone you meet is fighting some kind of battle.

                  Comment


                  • #10
                    Re: Car Talk

                    Originally posted by shiny! View Post

                    ...I see big, mostly empty busses on the streets of my city. ...
                    It's true everywhere, and it's still a good thing.

                    In one aspect the buses are just like the roads- busy and crowded during the rush hours in the morning and evening, and underused at all other times,.

                    The most expensive part of the bus is the driver.
                    It's not practical to find drivers willing to work just a couple hours in the morning and a couple hours in the evening.
                    They want a full day's work and a full day's pay.

                    So the buses drive routes all day, picking up the odd passenger here and there.
                    After rush hours some buses run a bit at night to serve the small demand that exists at night.

                    The big loads they run at rush hour justify all the rest.

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                    • #11
                      Re: Car Talk

                      Two self-driving cars involved in close call in California

                      Two self-driving cars from different companies have been involved in a close call on the roads of California.

                      A self-driving Lexus operated by Google apparently cut off a self-driving Audi run by Delphi Automotive as it was trying to change lanes, causing it to take “appropriate action” to avoid a collision, said a Delphi executive.

                      John Absmeier, who was travelling in his company’s car at the time, said the Audi was forced to abort its lane change in the incident, which happened earlier this week.

                      The close call is apparently the first such incident involving two self-driving cars.


                      Is it just me or did 'someone' get a little pissed off . . .

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                      • #12
                        Re: Car Talk

                        Originally posted by shiny! View Post

                        Maybe someday we'll have synchronized electric mass transit vehicles moving people on solar powered roads

                        Solar Roadways
                        Why not put panels over the roads?

                        We were in Carson City recently and parked at a hotel with solar panels over the parking lot. It was nice - covered parking. Parking on the panels just doesn't make sense to me, nor does driving on them.

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                        • #13
                          Re: Car Talk

                          Originally posted by LorenS View Post
                          Why not put panels over the roads?

                          We were in Carson City recently and parked at a hotel with solar panels over the parking lot. It was nice - covered parking. Parking on the panels just doesn't make sense to me, nor does driving on them.
                          I like it! In the south, panels over the roads and parking lots would provide much needed shade.

                          Check out the 100 mph Raht Racer. It has the same 3-wheel, tandem seating form as the Arcimoto and Elio with a safety roll cage, but it's powered with pedaling and a battery. Pedaling energy doesn't go to the wheels, but to a generator that charges the battery, amplifying the driver's energy output. Pedaling gives it a much longer range than current battery-only vehicles. It can also be driven like a pure recumbent bike with pedaling only, or battery only. Now if only they can bring it to production for the same price that Elio is promising.

                          I think we're in a very creative time, similar to the development of early airplanes and automobiles.

                          Be kinder than necessary because everyone you meet is fighting some kind of battle.

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