Car device prompts driver to stay in proper lane
By IANSSaturday, June 5, 2010
LONDON - When the steering wheel starts vibrating strongly, it indicates your car is too close to the edge of the road. WayPilot, a new Norwegian product, helps to keep it where it should be in the driving lane.
Examples of such systems include driving lane aids that warn the driver if his vehicle leaves the lane without the blinker being activated as can happen when the driver nods off.
Safety equipment of this sort has reduced both collisions and cases of driving off the road.
“What many of these systems have in common is that they utilise video-cameras to orient themselves with respect to the road,” says SINTEF research manager Terje Moen.
“The disadvantage of such systems is that during the winter, snow and dirt can cover the road markings, leaving them fairly useless. Worn or non-existent marking also put video-based systems out of action. This Norwegian product deals with the problem in a unique way.”
In 2004, the Arendal company WayPilot started to develop systems for driving lane support and for warning drivers when their vehicle was unintentionally being allowed to leave a marked lane.
SINTEF joined the project two years later, using its vehicle simulator to evaluate how WayPilot interacts with the driver.
The safety package comprises antennae installed in the base of the car’s door openings, and RFID transponders, which are a type of radio transceiver moulded into robust plastic casings that are buried under the top asphalt layer on the road.
“As part of a project together with the Norwegian Public Roads Administration, WayPilot and Innovation Norway, SINTEF tested WayPilot on a group of subjects, using the SINTEF/ Norwegian University of Science and Technology driving simulator.
The main objective of the test series was to identify the best method of warning the driver, but we also looked at the robustness of the technology involved, as well as the market potential of the product,” says Moen, according to a SINTEF release.
“The subjects found that a vibration warning system was better than a mobile warning, and they ranked steering wheel vibration ahead of vibration of the seat,” says Moen.