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Linda Maze, a Wedding photography Gainesville FL in Gainesville Florida

A extremely extraordinary Volkswagen Touareg finished a 130-mile cross-desert race in fastest time winning one of the worlds toughest automotive challenges .  But there was no podium celebration or champagne for the driver – the global competition was for hi-tech driverless cars .

The product of a collaboration between the Volkswagen Electronics Research Laboratory (ERL) and Stanford University, the winning Touareg (nicknamed ‘Stanley’) covered the course in 6 hours, 53 minutes and 8 seconds – 11 minutes and 42 seconds faster than the nearest finisher.

A total of twenty three cars participated the test which took place over 130-miles of desert roads, mountain trails, dry lakebeds and tunnels using only on-board sensors and satellite navigation equipment with no human help . The course was revealed on the morning of the start and rules stipulate it must be covered in under 10 hours – the Touareg managed this effortlessly with over 3 hours remaining .

The mobile laboratory, Stanley, navigated the path  using countless gadgets – numerous sensors all aroung the vehicle tell the seven networked Pentium motherboards with 1.6 GHz processors what the vehicle is doing. Simultaneously , laser detectors, stereo visual equipment and short range 24-GHz radar systems link to the millimetre accurate Global Positioning Satellite (GPS) system.

The networked processors combine all the data to develop the quickest and safest route for the automobile . This information is fed to newly invnented ‘drive by wire’ systems operating the brakes, accelerator and steering.

Electronics apart, the standard Touareg was more than up to the rugged Mojave terrain, the only differences being underbody protection plates and uprated suspension dampers.

The Grand trial hails from the Pentagon and the US Department of Defense offer a $2million cash for the winning automobile . The first Grand Challenge ran in 2004 with a $1million prize. in spite some strong entries, not one vehicle finished the inaugural race; the extreme travelling vehicle managed just over seven miles.

The research involved in inventing Stanley will lead directly to safer and more responsive assistance systems for Volkswagen vehicles, rather than a completely autonomous vehicle. The aim is to make driving even safer in the future . Devices used within Stanley are not far removed from current vehicle technology – the short-range radar system is a development of the Adaptive Cruise Control (ACC) currently available on Passat. This system acknowledges dangerous situations using radar measurements and activates the brakes as a precaution.

Bought to you by Van Reviews in association with automotive recruitment

 

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