http://fortune.com/2016/01/08/self-driving-nissan-leaf/
What It’s Like to Ride in Nissan's Self-Driving Electric LEAF
January 8, 2016  Katie Fehrenbacher

[images  
https://fortunedotcom.files.wordpress.com/2016/01/nissanleaf-testdrive2.jpg?quality=80&w=840&h=485&crop=1
 Driving in the back of a self-driving Nissan electric LEAF. Photo by
Fortune, Katie Fehrenbacher

https://fortunedotcom.files.wordpress.com/2016/01/nissanleaf2.jpg?quality=80&w=1024&h=683
The self-driving Nissan LEAF, outside of Nissan’s Silicon Valley Research
Center in Sunnyvale, Calif.Fortune, Katie Fehrenbacher
]

The electric car maker plans to add autonomous features to at least 10 of
its cars over the next four years.

“Stop, stop, stop,” Nissan engineer Tetsuya Iijima repeats quietly, with
only a slight touch of worry in his voice, as the self-driving car that he
and a group of journalists are riding in creeps slightly into a busy
intersection in Sunnyvale, Calif. on Thursday afternoon.

The light-gray autonomous all-electric LEAF, made by Nissan, rolled to a
stop short of being in any real danger—to the relief of the worried
journalists inside. Using a combination of 12 cameras, four side-panel laser
scanners, a trunk full of computing power and access to detailed mapping
data, the self-piloted car can mostly drive itself. Iijima, Nissan’s general
manager for automated driving tech, was able to sit with his hands off the
wheel—at least mostly—during our short ride.

The ride was also a look not-so-far into the future of driving, as
envisioned by one of a handful of companies racing to develop autonomous car
technology. “We’re going to the freeway next,” Iijima announces calmly as
the car heads toward Highway 237. The passengers appear noticeably
concerned.

This is the first public test drive of Nissan’s self-driving electric LEAF
in the U.S. using this particular combination of sensors. The company showed
off the configuration for the first time in Tokyo a couple months ago. It’s
“immature” technology right now, says Iijima.

Nissan brought its self-driving car to Silicon Valley to start testing it on
U.S. roads. The company’s Silicon Valley Research center, which hosted a
media event unveiling the technology and other projects on Thursday, is
critical for Nissan’s research into artificial intelligence and connected
cars.

Despite the LEAF’s success in chauffeuring a Fortune reporter, Nissan plans
to move towards self-driving cars in a much more cautious, methodical manner
than companies like Google GOOG -1.64% . As with its electric cars, Nissan
is focused on bringing self-driving features to the mass market.

The company plans to commercially introduce self-driving features—like
autonomous driving in traffic jams and hands-free lane changing—when the
cost is low enough and safe enough for its bulk mainstream car lineup.
Currently the sensor and computing technology used for the self-driving
Nissan LEAF we rode in, costs many times more than ones Nissan would use on
its commercial Nissan LEAFs.

We’re not building autonomous technology to be “beta-tested” “on a few
vehicles,” said Nissan CEO Carlos Ghosn during the event on Thursday.
Instead, Nissan and its partner, French automaker Renault, plan to add
incremental autonomous features to ten vehicle models over the next four
years. This is not about “replacing the driver” but about “empowering the
driver,” Ghosn says.

[image]  Nissan’s CEO Carlos Ghosn at Nissan’s Silicon Valley Research
Center in Sunnyvale, Calif.Fortune, Katie Fehrenbacher

Self-driving cars are the hottest technology in Silicon Valley these days.
At the Consumer Electronics Show this week, automakers like Ford F -1.50% ,
Toyota TM -2.17% , Volkswagen, and GM GM -1.53% , all showed off their
latest technologies. Like with Nissan, many of these car companies have
research centers in Silicon Valley that seek to attract the most talented
Bay Area engineers and partner with the leading tech players.

Meanwhile, Valley tech giants like Google, as well electric car upstart
Tesla TSLA -2.16% , are building their own self-driving car technologies.
Tesla premiered autonomous lane changing and driving on its latest Model S
cars with an over-the-air software update a couple months ago. That
technology attracted considerable attention, as well as some worry about
reckless driving.

Unlike Tesla’s approach for its pricy six-figure cars, Nissan and Renault
are heavily focused on creating this technology for mainstream
$30,000-priced cars. Ghosn referred to the $100,000 electric car as “a
niche.” The ten vehicles that will get autonomous features will be
“mainstream, mass-market cars at affordable prices,” the partners said in a
press release.

Nissan took the same approach with its electric cars, which it introduced
years ago. The company has sold almost 300,000 of them, including about
200,000 of its reasonably-priced LEAF model.

Nissan and Renault don’t want to just move into autonomous vehicles in a
step-by-step manner to make sure the technology is reliable and safe. The
companies also want to make sure that both the consumer and the regulators
are comfortable with the idea of self-driving cars.

Nissan will be able to make a fully self-driving car by 2020, said Ghosn.
But whether regulators will let you drive the car is a bigger question, he
said.
[© fortune.com]
...
http://www.ibnlive.com/news/auto/nissan-tests-all-electric-driverless-car-at-nasa-facility-1187218.html
Nissan tests all-electric, driverless car at NASA facility
Jan 09, 2016   San Francisco: With the help from NASA space technology,
automaker Nissan has successfully test-driven its all-electric, driverless
car at NASA’s Ames Research Centre in California this week that will help
scientists send self-driving vehicles on deeper space missions ...




For EVLN EV-newswire posts use: 
http://evdl.org/evln/


{brucedp.150m.com}

--
View this message in context: 
http://electric-vehicle-discussion-list.413529.n4.nabble.com/EVLN-What-It-s-Like-to-Ride-in-a-Nissan-s-Self-Driving-Electric-Leaf-tp4679689.html
Sent from the Electric Vehicle Discussion List mailing list archive at 
Nabble.com.
_______________________________________________
UNSUBSCRIBE: http://www.evdl.org/help/index.html#usub
http://lists.evdl.org/listinfo.cgi/ev-evdl.org
Read EVAngel's EV News at http://evdl.org/evln/
Please discuss EV drag racing at NEDRA (http://groups.yahoo.com/group/NEDRA)

Reply via email to