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Will driverless trucks soon roll onto our roads?

2014-06-11 06:17:15

Jack Stewart

Forget driverless cars, the first robot vehicles to overtake you on the road

could be trucks. Jack Stewart peeks into the cab of a self-driving behemoth

that takes over tasks once restricted to human drivers.

The future of driving is automated, we re being led to believe. Only last week,

computing giant Google unveiled plans for a self-driving car it will build

itself.

But long before we re sitting in the passenger seat being ferried to our

destination by a robot driver, a much bigger kind of vehicle is likely to be

zooming past us, its speed and braking controlled not by a human but by a

computer.

Long-distance lorries may be the ideal test-bed for autonomous driving

technology, and it could bring improvements in safety and fuel consumption.

One company that s already built robot trucks is Peloton Technology, based in

Silicon Valley, California. There I looked around one of two enormous, maroon

and gold truck cabs fitted with driverless tech. This iconic symbol of the

great American open road, dripping with chrome and nostalgia, is not an

everyday sight in Silicon Valley offices, but Peloton s CEO Josh Switkes

believes his company can marry the two.

The trucks differ little physically from an ordinary big-rig, apart from extra

aerials and a tablet computer (Peloton Technology)

It s a system that could immediately save lives, save fleets money, reduce

energy use, and have these benefits immediately and on a large scale, says

Switkes.

Since trucking is such a huge industry, the impact of driverless tech could be

significant, he suggests. In Europe, for example, there are around 6.5 million

heavy goods vehicles in circulation. And in the US it is estimated that there

are 15.5 million trucks in operation. As they say in the freight world: If you

bought it, a truck brought it, meaning most of what we consume is conveyed by

lorry at some point in its life cycle.

In the seat

I climbed up the steps into the cab, and into the surprisingly springy driver s

seat. Behind the almost horizontal steering wheel was a vast array of switches

and dials, displaying the state of various truck systems; standard fare for a

big-rig. The only obvious sign that this truck packed more advanced features

were half-metre-long antennaes on the large shiny wing mirrors, and a display

on the windscreen. Mounted high, where a rear-view mirror would normally be,

was a computer tablet.

The principle behind the technology Peloton is working on is simple enough to

anyone with even a passing interest in competitive cycling. If you have ever

watched a long race like the Tour de France, you will have seen the riders

cluster in a group the peloton. That cuts wind resistance for the riders in

the pack, and they can make more progress with less energy. The same applies in

the truck world. Platooning vehicles can save the trailing vehicles a lot of

energy, and the front one benefits too because it decreases turbulence left in

a large vehicle s wake, which negatively impacts aerodynamics. Peloton (the

company) is developing technology which would allow trucks to form two vehicles

platoons, driving far more closely to each other than human drivers would be

able to, to cut fuel use and emissions.

The trucks have already carried thousands of miles of tests in Texas (Peloton

Technology)

The company claims that real-world road tests show that platooning technology

saves 10% fuel costs for the rear truck and 4.5% for the lead truck. Fuel costs

in the US now account for 40% of operating costs for fleets, so the savings can

be substantial.

Close contact

There is no physical link between the trucks, and yet they travel between 23m

and 6m (75ft and 20ft) apart. That compares to a recommended distance of

several hundred feet for a human driver because of our slow reaction times.

In the rear vehicle, the tablet shows a driver s-eye-view from the front truck,

so the driver behind can keep an eye on what is going on ahead. Or, in the

front truck the driver can have a drivers-eye view from the rear truck. That

might sound like a rather uninteresting view of the back of his own truck at

close quarters, but it also gives a very clear view of his blind spots, so it

can be used to improve safety.

The trucks will be able to drive with a gap of only a few metres between them

(Peloton Technology)

The front truck communicates directly with the rear truck, conveying

information including braking, vehicle speed and engine torque. There are just

two switches to control the platooning system. First, both trucks check in with

a control centre, which makes sure they are on a suitable road, weather

conditions are ok, and it is safe to engage. The Platooning Network Operations

Center is like air traffic control, but much more automated, says Switkes.

If they get the OK, it just takes a flick of a switch to engage the system. The

rear driver still has to pay attention, and control the steering, but the

brakes and accelerator are handed over to the computer.

Peloton is not the only company looking at autonomous truck convoys. A test

project known as Satre (Safe Road Trains for the Environment) has just been

completed in Europe. Convoys of trucks and Volvo cars were driven in formation

at distances of just four metres apart.

Tough tests

I wondered about safety. What if something goes wrong with the system? Switkes

says he has faith in the technology. The car each of us drives each day has

numerous systems that are safety critical, he says, giving the example of

stability control, which can apply brakes selectively to control or limit

sliding. If it went wrong it could actually cause a vehicle to spin, but the

systems are well designed and rigorously tested.

Google's new self-driving car is not the only vehicle that could be driving

itself on future roads (Google)

The technology is ready to move beyond the track trials we have seen elsewhere

around the world, and is now hitting the roads.

Peloton has just completed a 6,000-mile (10,000km) test in Texas with the US

Department of Energy, and in total has covered around 15,000 platooned miles

(24,000km).

The nice thing about trucks is that you can very quickly build up a lot of

test mileage because they are driven so many miles, says Switkes.

The future of robot trucking may be just about to overtake you on the road.