Mercedes offering sophisticated car safety technology
Sophisticated automobiles featuring smart control technology look set to help reduce the rate of serious injuries and fatalities on the road network, as well as improving traffic flow. Tests on a new system from Mercedes have shown the technology can avoid an impact with another vehicle. This system brings the vehicle to a complete stop from speeds of up to 40km/h, without the driver having to take any action. The automatic braking package is being fitted to the latest version of the Mercedes C- Class. The
July 21, 2014
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Sophisticated automobiles featuring smart control technology look set to help reduce the rate of serious injuries and fatalities on the road network, as well as improving traffic flow. Tests on a new system from 2796 Mercedes have shown the technology can avoid an impact with another vehicle. This system brings the vehicle to a complete stop from speeds of up to 40km/h, without the driver having to take any action. The automatic braking package is being fitted to the latest version of the Mercedes C- Class. The system features a combination of advanced sensors and sophisticated software. This allows it to avoid collisions at speeds twice that of earlier technologies offered on the market. Meanwhile Japanese firm 2454 Nissan Motor is working on cars that will traffic-jam pilot and automatic parking systems by the end of 2016. These will be followed in due course by more autonomous driving technologies such as controls allowing safer driving on congested highways with multiple-lanes. The firm intends to roll this technology out by 2018.
Nissan is working on an innovative intelligent vehicle technology it calls autonomous drive. The company believes it can make this ready for the market by 2020. The system is intended to make driving safer and more efficient, reducing the risk of crashes, increasing mobility for the disabled and elderly and also optimising driving with a reduction in fuel usage and vehicle wear. To help with the development programme, Nissan is constructing a test area where the vehicles can be driven around a series of roa
Nearly every traffic accident caused by driver error – up to 90 per cent of all crashes – could be eliminated if existing intelligent transportation technologies were implemented in vehicles and on roads, say experts at IEEE, the world's largest technical professional association. These include electronics and computing technologies such as in-vehicle machine vision and sensors to detect drowsy drivers, lane departure warning systems, and vehicle-to-vehicle and vehicle-to-infrastructure communications for s
A UK highway project has benefited from the latest software, GIS and GPS technology, Mike Woof reports. Sophisticated software, GIS and GPS technology has played an important role in a large highway upgrade project in the UK and helping to increase efficiency and drive down construction costs.
Major innovations in concrete paving systems will offer customers improved surface finishes - Mike Woof writes
US manufacturers continue to dominate the concrete paving sector, with German firm Wirtgen being the only exception. A number of Chinese manufacturers have attempted to enter the concrete paving market with compact machines but have so far had little success in tempting customers away from proven brands. The expertise in for the niche segment of concrete paving remains the preserve of a handful