The long-haul truck of
the future.
As seen in Mercedes-Benz next magazine: The Mercedes-Benz Future
Truck 2025 provides a glimpse of driverless trucks – and the transport industry
of the future.
There is a revolution taking place, but at a relaxed pace. Calmly and safely, the Mercedes-Benz Future
Truck 2025 rolls down the highway at 85 km/h. The tractor and trailer brake and
accelerate with precision, riding in the middle of the right-hand lane in
flowing traffic. This scene, however, is anything but routine. Though the
driver is seated behind the wheel, he is staring at a tablet computer, planning
his next trip and then checking the condition of the freight stored on smart
pallets in the semitrailer.
The truck is being driven by
an automated system called Highway Pilot. The human does the thinking and
leaves the driving to the computer.
"Vehicle to Vehicle Communication"
The near-standard study of
an autonomously driven truck demonstrates that the vehicle can also handle
special situations without a hitch: The truck automatically pulls into the
left-hand lane to allow sufficient room to pass a car broken down on the side
of the road. The truck and trailer then pull over to the right a little to
allow room for an emergency vehicle approaching from the rear, which announced
its presence by exchanging data with the truck.
Especially among smaller
vehicles, this process goes by the name of “car-to-car communication” (C2C),
but the umbrella term used is vehicle-to-vehicle communication (V2V).
Future technology standards.
In the meantime, the driver
has found time to reserve a parking spot at the next rest stop, process orders
and maintain contacts using a video telephony. Only when the truck leaves the
highway does he take the wheel himself and steer the Actros to its destination.
With the technologies demonstrated in the Future Truck 2025, Daimler is setting
the standard for the future of long-distance transport. “The truck of the
future is a Mercedes-Benz and is driverless,” emphasizes Wolfgang
Bernhard, member of the Daimler Board of Management and in charge of trucks and
buses, at the premiere of the Future Truck in July 2014 on a closed-off section
of the Autobahn near Magdeburg, Germany.
More safety by driver assistance.
The Future Truck 2025
provides a taste of developments in commercial vehicle technology in the near
future. These innovations will have an impact on business models in the
transport industry as well as on the demanding job of a truck driver. With
factors such as sustained attention, tight schedules and high traffic density,
everyday tasks behind the wheel of a big rig place extreme demands on truckers,
as confirmed by Klaus Ruff, Deputy Head of Prevention for the
Berufsgenossenschaft für Transport und Verkehrswirtschaft (BG Verkehr –
Transport Industry Professional Association) based in Hamburg. The intelligent
interlinking of the driver assistance systems down to the automated driving
itself contributes significantly to vehicle safety, stressed Ruff.
The truck becomes office.
The Future Truck 2025 makes
the impact of modern technology tangible. In particular, monotonous long-haul
routes lasting hours and hours on major highways, often with tight schedules,
could be made easier very soon by trucks that drive themselves. During the
trip drivers perform other tasks of considerable value to their companies,
including, for example, flexible scheduling of the current trip, planning of
upcoming trips and bookkeeping. A truck driver can completely count on the
computer systems of his truck, which, thanks to its sensors and exchanging of
data with its environment, safely and efficiently heads toward its destination.
“When Highway Pilot is
activated, driving becomes a secondary task for the trucker,” confirms Sven
Ennerst, Head of Truck Development at Daimler.
The future on the road.
Experts agree that
autonomous vehicles will soon be reality on the streets – whether driverless
fleets of taxis, privately owned cars or commercial vehicles.
Four states in the US –
Nevada, Florida, California and Michigan – currently permit operation of
autonomous vehicles on public roads under certain conditions. The UK has
allowed robotic cars to be used since 2013.
“Fully connected machine with a hive mentality.”
Although the Highway Pilot
in the Mercedes-Benz Future Truck steers, brakes and accelerates
autonomously, the system does not make decisions simply based on information
from its own sensors. Instead, the truck acquires a significant amount of
information by exchanging data with other vehicles (V2V), with the
infrastructure’s stationary communication network (vehicle-to-infrastructure communication
or V2I) and by using satellite navigation to determine its position. That is
why Stefan Buchner, Head of Mercedes-BenzTrucks, describes the autonomous
truck clad in its futuristic adhesive foil disguise, as a “fully connected
machine with a hive mentality.”
The fourth industrial revolution.
This principle of shared
intelligence holds the future of not just the transport industry but industry
as a whole, says Sabina Jeschke. The professor at the Department of Computer
Science in Mechanical Engineering at the Rheinisch-Westfälische Technische
Hochschule (RWTH) in Aachen, places the Future Truck 2025, featured in the
“Mobility 4.0″ initiative, on the same level as digitally linked production
processes and intralogistics. These kinds of processes, based on the flexible
exchange of information between machines, vehicles, warehouses and other
elements of industrial process chains, form the backbone of what is referred to
as the “fourth industrial revolution.” Even Uwe Clausen, Head of the
Fraunhofer Institute for Material Flow and Logistics (IML) in Dortmund stresses
that “potential future efficiency does not lie in vehicles alone but in the
interplay of vehicles, infrastructure and transport systems.”
The Mercedes-Benz Future
Truck 2025 is already demonstrating what the future of intelligently connected
freight traffic will look like.
From trucker to logistics
expert.
Autonomous commercial
vehicles will change freight traffic, and that is a major opportunity for the
logistics industry. After all, the transport industry is having to face the
two-fold challenge of a distinct lack of junior talent and the image of a
trucker as a less-than-attractive career option. The need for action in light
of these facts was shown in the first study on the future of truck driving
conducted with the aid of automobile parts supplier ZF Friedrichshafen and
published in 2012: A resounding 87% of first-time employees surveyed named
better working conditions as an important goal of future developments. Nothing
has changed since then, as seen in a second study released by ZF in 2014.










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