Radar For Safer Driving 484
KarmaOverDogma writes "The New York Times reports that in the next few years, auto manufacturers may look to use low powered phased-array radar in the back of cars, in combination with enhanced mirror displays, to help reduce accidents related to so-called 'blind-spots.' The system currently under devlopment is a result of a partnership between Valeo, an auto parts supplier, and Raytheon, a military contractor. They note that according to data from the NHTSA, In the last 10 years such (blind-spot) accidents led to 1.5 million injuries and caused more than $360 billion in damage in the United States alone. With an expected cost of around $500.00 (depending on the configuration), will this low-power radar system from the 1970's really help make driving safer?"
Article Text/Psuedo-Mirror (Score:2, Informative)
And here is the NYT Text for those of us who value privacy online:
Radar Brings Vision to Cars' Blind Spots By TIM MORAN
Published: February 2, 2004
Valeo Raytheon Systems A radar system that scans adjacent lanes and flashes a warning icon in the rearview mirror could reduce lane-change collisions. PHASED-ARRAY radar, a technology used by the military to guide missiles
Re: (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Article Text/Psuedo-Mirror (Score:4, Funny)
Re:Article Text/Psuedo-Mirror (Score:2, Interesting)
We spend all of this money on preventing car accidents... when smoking and obesity kills a lot more people.
At least in North Carolina cars will fly before we spend that money against smoking and obesity however.
Re:Article Text/Psuedo-Mirror (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Article Text/Psuedo-Mirror (Score:5, Insightful)
1) Smoking and obesity are choices that people make for themselves, which generally only affect themselves. If someone wants to smoke and give themselves lung cancer, that's not my problem and I really don't care unless they try to smoke near me (which is why anti-public-smoking laws are good), or they try to get the government to use my tax money to pay for their health care. (The issue of how it affects the children they live with is something different altogether I won't get into.) Car accidents are something that certainly can affect me, since I have to share the road with all the other moron drivers out there. Anything that can help these morons to avoid hitting me is probably a good thing. Of course, I make mistakes sometimes too, so I wouldn't mind having such a system to keep me from hitting someone as well.
2) What's with this "We spend all this money... when smoking and obesity kills a lot more people?" Who's "we"??? I'm not paying for these radar systems, unless I decide to purchase a vehicle with one installed. The technology was developed by the government for missiles, which is part of the government's job of providing a military and defense. So the basic technology is already developed and paid for, for a purpose that had nothing to do with cars. Now, some private companies are spending their own money to further develop this technology for use in cars. Obviously, they're spending this money (of their own) because they anticipate making profits by selling this technology to the automotive industry suppliers. Eventually, the people paying for this will be the people who buy cars that include it. If you don't like it, you're free to not buy such a car.
Just because someone somewhere is spending money on something that doesn't save the maximum number of lives in your eyes doesn't mean it's wasted, and is really none of your business when it's their own private money, not yours. How the hell do you think these companies would even be able to do anything about smoking and obesity? One's a defense contractor and one's an automotive supplier.
Re:Article Text/Psuedo-Mirror (Score:5, Informative)
Most people adjust their side mirrors so that it shows the rear edge of their car and the lane directly behind them. You see much the same thing in your side mirrors as you do in your rearview mirror.
Instead, lean your head to your left until it touches the window glass, then adjust the left mirror until you can just see the left rear corner of the car. Lean your head approximately the same distance to the right, until your head is near the middle of the car, and adjust your right mirror until you can just see the right rear corner of the car. When you sit up straight, you will no longer have a blind spot. Your side mirrors will no longer show you a distance view of the lane to either side, but you can easily see those positions in your rear view mirror. If you drive past another car, you will see the rear of the other car in your side view before the front drops out of sight in your peripheral vision. As you move past, you will see the rear of the car show up in your rearview mirror just before the front disappears from your side view mirror. No blind spot at all.
It will take a few days of driving for you to adjust yourself to the different view in your side mirrors; it will seem a bit awkward at first. But you really will have no blind spot.
Re:Article Text/Psuedo-Mirror (Score:3, Insightful)
The fact of the matter is, many places instruct the driver to set up their mirrors with the edge of the car visible. I personally think having the mirrors set for the blind spot is much more dangerous. I also like having the edge of the car visible as a frame of reference.
There are many situations where you need an alternative to the rear-view mirror. This is especially importa
Re:Article Text/Psuedo-Mirror (Score:3, Interesting)
What blind spot? No fancy radar required. Why do we need to go high tech when all we need to do is change the requirements for new vehicles to come with mirrors like this from the factory? Radar can fail, takes power, etc. A mirror
Yes, these do work. I've avoided quite a lot of dangerous merges, and been w
Re:Article Text/Psuedo-Mirror (Score:3, Insightful)
Or you could just distrust your mirrors and look over your shoulder like you were taught to back when you were learning to drive.
Re:Article Text/Psuedo-Mirror (Score:2)
Slashdot has a decent privacy policy and gives me the option of being anonymous, so I don't mind posting as a registered user. I will post anonymously if I don't want my name associated with something.
I do apologize for not noticing the second page, though.
Josh
Just look over your shoulder! (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Just look over your shoulder! (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Just look over your shoulder! (Score:4, Funny)
Re:Just look over your shoulder! (Score:2)
Re:Just look over your shoulder! (Score:3, Insightful)
I like the radar, but with cameras so cheap and common you'd think no one should have a blind spot anymore.
BTW, looking over your sholder in heavy traffic is dangerous. Yeah, you currently need to do it, but if it could be avoided it would save a lot of rear-end accidents.
TW
Re:Just look over your shoulder! (Score:2)
Or when you're in heavy traffic.
Or when pulling a trailer
or if your car's structural supports are in your way.
Re:Just look over your shoulder! (Score:3, Interesting)
I guess the "towing package" blind-spot radar would have twice as many radar arrays. When you hooked up something to tow, the software would switch to the 10-foot-longer radars. The designers would have to make certain assumptions about how long an item you were going
Re:Just look over your shoulder! (Score:2, Interesting)
i agree with you, but nobody does it in this college town, they just come uver without looking. also, like the article points out, old people cant turn their necks. i
Re:Just look over your shoulder! (Score:2)
My biggest driving grip is no one uses signals anymore (indicate for the british among us). They just hook their wheel violently into the other lane. I guess that they don't realize that 9 times out of 10, the person to the left or right will let you in if you signal, but I'll be damned if i'm going to let you in if you're not signalling.
Woohoo! Being on the collision avoidance systems! (Score:2, Insightful)
As a motorcycle rider, I'd welcome anything that clues lazy drivers in to my whereabouts (if the raging engine and the bright light isn't enough of a hint).
Some stupid fucks refuse to acknowledge my existence when I'm right beside the driver's window.. they need all the help they can get.
Re:Woohoo! Being on the collision avoidance system (Score:3, Insightful)
Don't ride next to cars.
Don't ride in a car's blind spot.
Don't tailgate.
For damn sure don't ride next or or in the blind spot of a bus or big rig.
If somebody wants past you, let them.
83 quadrillion miles of roads on the planet, most of which don't have a car in either direction for half a mile. In a pack of cars? Speed up or slow down until you are pretty much by yourself. Most of the time cars travel in herds, with lots of space between them. Get in that open space, and enjoy
Re:Just look over your shoulder! (Score:2, Insightful)
That solution only works 50% of the time (Score:3, Insightful)
And in fact, if this is designed correctly (which I'm skeptical about: for one thing the little light should be on when it's safe to merge rather than off, so you aren't lured into a false sense of security if it burns out) it could be helpful for responsible drivers, too. I know I certainly hate turning my head to look backwards while I'm driving fo
Re:Just look over your shoulder! (Score:3, Interesting)
Anecdote: A few months ago on a busy three-lane interstate highway and after checking and rechecking the middle lane to pass a slower car, I narrowly avoided a collision with a car who came flying around a car in the middle lane to the left lane and back into the middle lane as I was changing lanes.
There are still instances where cars will drive diagonally from one
Re:Just look over your shoulder! (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Just look over your shoulder! (Score:3, Insightful)
This overreliance on gadgets is not a particularly good thing. Some would say that the lowly side-view mirrors are too much technology for some people. They check their mirrors, and assume they are safe. My mother does this all the time. I refuse to ride with her in cities because that is where this becomes most dangerous, with cars weaving in and out of traffic. She simply refuses to look over her shoulder, believing the mirrors a
Rear-Ender (Score:3, Interesting)
It's almost a given that when you turn your head to look over your shoulder, the car in front of you will brake. By the time you look back, you probably don't have time to stop. Turning your head, refocusing, etc., takes way too much time at speed on a busy freeway.
You're safer speeding up a bit and moving into an open spot (or creating one) in the next lane.
Re:Just look over your shoulder! (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Just look over your shoulder! (Score:2)
Re:... says the chronic tailgater (Score:3, Insightful)
Examples being a friend who hit a 2x4 at 140kph and had it shred one of his performance tyres and crack an
Re:Or... (Score:2)
Do we need it? (Score:2, Interesting)
It's official... (Score:5, Funny)
It would really come in handy during rush hour though.
Will it? (Score:5, Funny)
Only if it jams cell phones in the process...
Convex Mirror (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Convex Mirror (Score:5, Funny)
Uh, you know where you are, right?
Re:Convex Mirror (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Convex Mirror (Score:2)
Well; at least phased array radar sounds like rocket science enough to be marketable
Re:Convex Mirror (Score:2, Informative)
Panoramic Rear View [rpminnovations.com]
Re:Convex Mirror (Score:2)
Re:Convex Mirror... works and costs 99 cents (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Convex Mirror (Score:3, Informative)
You can buy add-on convex mirrors that stick-on to your existing exterior mirro
Safer? (Score:5, Insightful)
We have multiple technologies such as this that will make driving a car much safer... the most important thing is making them cheap enough to be affordable and practical on vehicles.
Davak
Re:Safer? (Score:2, Insightful)
Sure, if you don't count dramatically increased risk of cancer from sitting in gridlock every day, being painted by the full-power radar of every car within 200 yards as "unsafe."
Again ... (Score:4, Insightful)
What you and different "safety proponent" are saying is essentially "We can compensate better for the population's lack of skill and attention".
SUVs have bigger blind spots... (Score:3, Insightful)
Prolly Won't Help Seattle Drivers... (Score:2, Funny)
Re:Prolly Won't Help Seattle Drivers... (Score:2)
A game for when you're driving through Kentucky -- (Score:2)
Even odds the vehicle doesn't have Kentucky plates.
[I'm originally from the DC area -- I lived in Lexington, KY for a couple of years. When I first got there, I was driving with some co-workers in my car, and I looked over my shoulder before changing lanes -- they asked me why I did that. I told them I was checking my blind spot. One of them asked me why I would have to do that.]
Re:Prolly Won't Help Seattle Drivers... (Score:2)
The only problem I see is... (Score:3, Insightful)
No thanks (Score:5, Insightful)
At what point does the driver get away with, well the beeper didn't sound, so I assumed there was no one beside me... I'm upset at how little people bother to actually pay attention when driving, and relying on some device to warn you if your manuever could potentially kill someone or be safe is just insane!
Maybe I'm old fashioned, and maybe it's the fact I ride a bike in traffic, but I'm sick and tired of people not paying attention while driving, and this is not going to help, it'll make them even lazier...
Constant safety level (Score:5, Insightful)
In that light, I expect that in many cases, a system like this will simply cause drivers to pay less attention to the road around them, supposedly safe in the knowledge that the new-fangled system will keep them out of trouble. Which it might do in many cases; but all? And meanwhile, people are learning the lesson that safety is the car's responsibility, and not theirs...
Sure it would help (Score:2, Insightful)
This won't eliminate this type of accident as a lot of people don't even look before changing lanes. Not much you can do about that...
Though if the radar senses a vehicle to the side of you and is displaying to you that there is a vehicle to the side of you, it may include that data in the black box which may be used against you and label you as in
In a word: (Score:2)
It's not that hard to take a quick peek over your shoulder before you turn your signal on and merge. Most drivers around here don't even bother with the turn signal. Adding technology will not make inherently unsafe drivers [or the drivers around them] more safe.
Re:In a word: (Score:2)
Heads Up (Score:4, Insightful)
I dunno. I actually think a lot of accidents are caused by lack of focus resulting in twisting and turning around too. Folks focused on the guy behind them not seeing that the car before them has its breaks on.
I've always been of the mind that a HUD is the way to go: not only for this collision information, but for things usually hidden behind the steering wheel (tac, speed, fuel). I think the integration of radio controls into the steering wheel is a great step in keeping people focused where all the kinetic energy of the car is going.
And, really, do you need to look at a rearview mirror if you have an icon before you saying "clear to left"?
Re:Heads Up (Score:4, Interesting)
Like the turn signal I've seen on Ford Expeditions, etc.? If the warning icon is on the outside of the car, then it's got the added effect of being visible to other cars on the road. Someone else would know when they're in your blind spot because your mirror is warning them, too. Interesting.
Radar? Better, cheaper, lo-tech solution. (Score:2, Interesting)
American drivers, as a rule, suck. One more reason I want to live in germany.
Re:Radar? Better, cheaper, lo-tech solution. (Score:2)
If you're not lining up the inner edge of your drivers side mirror with the outer left edge of your inside center mirror, you're going to miss a lot of things... but if you do, there is no blind spot, no surprises, and life is good.
--Mike--
Re:Radar? Better, cheaper, lo-tech solution. (Score:2)
Inside mirror? oh, that thing pointing at back window. Too bad I drive a work truck with a solid topper. There is no way to adjust the inside mirror so I can see anything, sheet metal is good for keeping tools in, but not very good for letting me see.
Overall I agree, when you have 3 mirrors in a standard car. Don't assume that a standard car is everyone. A lot of drivers cannot use that inside center mirror.
Re:Radar? Better, cheaper, lo-tech solution. (Score:2)
One day, I glanced in my rear-view mirror, and there were some flashing lights... I now no longer have a license, or a car... but hey, at least I was a safe driver (although the judge disagreed, hence the lack of driving privelages)... What's wrong with going 215 in a 100 zo
This would be entirely unnecessary... (Score:5, Informative)
Most people have their side mirrors adjusted so as to point back down the side of the vehicle, which is not very useful. If you adjust them to point into the next lane over, you can completely eliminate the blind spot. A good way to set this up is to put your head against the side window and adjust the left mirror so that the side of the car is just barely visible, then align your head with the centerline of the car and do the same with the right mirror. With a little tweaking, you should be able to track passing cars on either side from the inside mirror to the side mirror to the side window without ever losing sight of them.
Re:This would be entirely unnecessary... (Score:4, Funny)
But it seems to give most people a warm fuzzy feeling to be able to see the back of their own vehicle in the side mirror. Dunno why, maybe they're afraid it'll just disappear one day and they might not notice without the mirror.
You're right that it's not a very helpful thing to watch when you're in traffic though.
Driving Schools. (Score:3, Interesting)
I know they teach this in the BMW driving schools. At my first event, I remember seeing one guy adjusting his by having a buddy stand behind his car, and move from right to left. The guy in the driver's seat would adjust his mirrors so that when the guy behind appeared on the left edge of the rearview mirror, he also appeared on the right edge of the left side mirror. (and the opposite for the right side mirror)
When you are on the
Re:This would be entirely unnecessary... (Score:5, Funny)
Lately though, the auto industry has adopted an alternate tactic - instead of making the blind spots too small to hide a vehicle in, make the vehicles too big to hide in the blind spots.
Some Forseeable Problems? (Score:4, Insightful)
A noise? How will I hear that over my radio? Think how the clicking of a turn signal can go unnoticed for miles.
A visual cue on the dash? But my head is turned looking for traffic, I won't see it. Again remember the blinking light of a turn signal.
Will this cause people to not look before changing lanes, etc? Will they become completly reliant on the technology? Is that neccesarily a bad thing?
One thing though, at $500 it's much cheaper than that rear looking camera that some new luxury cars have. And for those cameras to work you have to be looking at the little screen not behind you, or in front of you, or out the side window. Doesn't seem to help the situation there.
If you just click the links... (Score:2)
RTFA:
Simple answer! (Score:2)
Lights? No...
Electric shock?
Now we're talking...
Passenger: "Dude you need to be in the left lane"
Driver: "Ok, let me just..."
*BZZZNYRRRGHT*
Driver (panting after extreme electrical shock): "Ok, maybe it isn't clear over there just yet..."
Ok, and one more question... if you have this system, is that damn light going to be constantly on if you are in the right lane of a street where they allow curbside parking? That would be enough to get me to remove the bulb from the indicator.
WDDNS Radar (Score:3, Insightful)
1) Proper driver education - skills and attitude
2) Proper enforcement of driving laws
3) Banning repeat offenders from driving - with jail for recalictrant people.
Bottom line - quite a few people lack the necessary motor skills, intelligence, and attitude to be allowed on the road.
Re:WDDNS Radar (Score:2, Insightful)
I submit that the old guy I saw this morning doing 35 mph along the highway, a 65 mph zone, in the center lane no less, was much more of a threat than the guy who passed me on the left hand side (and was obviously speeding since I was moving at or slightly over the limit). People were slamming on their brakes and swerving to get around him, etc..
I do agree with you in principle. Rather than a $500 dollar doohickey that tells me when someone is in my bli
No (Score:5, Funny)
What would make driving safer would be to require better qualifications and a different license class for 5'1" women to drive trucks with 400 horsepower engines which are utilized primarily to travel the two blocks from the bank to the grocery store at 75MPH, tailgating everyone else on the road all the way.
That would be a start. Yeah, the radar might help too, but then again, perhaps there wouldn't be a ten-yard wide blind spot if a) the windows weren't five feet off the ground and b) if a more sensible vehicle size could be offered, like say, five tons instead of six.
Just a thought.
Re:No (Score:3, Funny)
You can only drive something you can push at least 10 feet on a smooth level surface, unless you take the type of course required to obtain a class C drivers license (or whatever it is that professional truck drivers have).
Could be pretty annoying... (Score:3, Insightful)
Now, if they could set it up to be active only under certain situations, that would be good. I'd say, for starters, that it should be active whenever:
Move the mirrors (Score:5, Interesting)
Better if it was forward-facing... (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Better if it was forward-facing... (Score:2)
Catch-22 (Score:3, Insightful)
If you fall back to leave a gap between you and the new lead car, someone else will come fill that space.
What do you mean no tan from an LED (Score:2)
"It would be like trying to get a suntan from a light-emitting diode," Mr. Remboski said. "It's just not going to happen."
Now they tell me! Well at least now I know that adding those few hundred more LED's to my tanning panel wont help at all.
Bad movies getting closer to reality! (Score:2)
military technology (Score:4, Interesting)
My oh my, but things were spooky back then. A good defense was considered a military advantage and harbinger of doom.
I guess the Cold War really is over. Now you can have PAR in the back on your Beemer to track incoming Hondas. OK, so maybe this is still about first-strike initiatives and counter-attack defense. I won't be worried until the Beemers and H2s start to carry surface-to-surface missles.
On a side note, "radar" used to be "RADAR" and was an acronym for something like "Radio Detection and Ranging". Funny how we co-opt technical terms and acronyms into the vernacular.
Re:military technology (Score:3, Informative)
Additional phased array radars, AN/FPS-115 [globalsecurity.org]'s, were built in California (Beale AFB) and Massachusetts (Otis AFB) expressly for the purpose of miss
phased-array radar - harumph. (Score:2)
While we're at it (Score:2)
Stop asking if we can, Start asking if we should.
--Mike--
These sensors should display on the windshield.. (Score:4, Interesting)
Sure, it helps when changing lanes, but also when a ladder falls off of the truck in front of you and you have to make a spit second decision (no time to look up at your review) you can just turn away from the 'red'.
And if both sides are read, just hit the brakes and hope for the best...
screw it (Score:2)
Kolvoord Starburst Maneuver (Score:2)
I wonder if you can pull off a Kolvoord Starburst Maneuver with a small fleet of Buick Centuries?
Re:Kolvoord Starburst Maneuver (Score:2)
HARM missile option on cars? (Score:5, Funny)
State of the art (Score:3, Informative)
Phased arrays are still state of the art for military radar targeting systems. They are unbelievably complicated systems when designed for highspeed target tracking and I'm sure whatever was used in the 70's doesn't even compare to what is used today. While modern naval warfare systems are not going to be employed in a car, I really doubt the tech implemented will totally lack the advances made since in the last >3 decades. This will be a damn cool gadget from a pure geek perspective.
Like most tools, the effectiveness will depend on the user. Side view mirrors are highly effective, but in my experience most drivers have no idea how to use them correctly (using them to view the side of their vehicle rather than expanding the rear view provided by the center mirror).
The only safe car (Score:2)
There's no need (Score:2)
Oh man... (Score:2)
Motorcyclists - lifesaver. (Score:5, Interesting)
Most car drivers on the other hand are lazy, blind, incompetent morons who are safe in the knowledge that they have 2 tonnes of steel safety cage surrounding them, being completely safe they don't need to check their blind spots, too much like hard work. Radar will only increase the *impression* of safety and will otherwise be utterly irrelevant.
What's needed are 5 year re-testable licenses like those the HGV drivers have to pass every few years.
A more useful application (Score:5, Funny)
This contraption would be mandatory for all trucks, SUVs, souped-up Japanese compacts, and Volvos.
That would cause accidents to drop by about 90% in my estimation.
So, what if (Score:4, Funny)
There's Can Be No Such Thing (Score:4, Insightful)
Only faster, more insane driving.
That's the way it always works. Make the lanes wider, and drivers speed up. Smooth out the hairpin curves, and drivers speed up. Install anti-lock brakes on most of the fleet, and drivers don't slow down for the rain any more. Put in better headlights, and drivers drive full-speed at night. People in general don't perceive driving as a dangerous activity (even though it's easily the most dangerous activity the average USian does on a regular basis) so they always go as fast as their comfort level - as opposed to their true safety level - allows.
And a traffic-following radar will just mean that the cell-phone using right-lane passer doing 85 in his Escalade won't feel obliged to lift his right foot ever again.
higher frequency technologies (Score:3, Informative)
The reason this is being investigated now is that 24GHz and 77GHz systems are now feasible at a reasonable costs. Therefore, a phased-array antenna is small enough to put in a car bumper.
Re:Better system for $0.89 (Score:5, Insightful)
There would not be a need to "change lanes like crazy" if it wouldn't be for the selfish idiots who block faster lanes.
The reason for safety and ORDUNG on German Autobahns is the lane discipline and cortesy that is drilled into their drivers. The road for them is the way of transportation and not the way of demonstrating their ego.
Further reading: http://www.motorists.org/ericpeters/skillvsspeed.