Mercury (Hobart) - Motoring

Safety first

The tech that protects your family on the road

- JOHN CAREY

SENSES were once the basis for all driving decision-making. Sight, hearing, smell and touch were all we had to work with behind the wheel. In today’s hitech world, sensors are here to help. They may already have saved you and your loved ones from disaster.

Car makers began using them in the 1970s and ’80s, when wheel-speed sensors made possible the developmen­t of anti-lock brakes, or ABS, which prevented the wheels locking up if you braked too hard.

These were joined by steering angle, G-force and turning-rate sensors to create electronic stability control in the ’90s. The sensors pick up when a car is losing control and brake individual wheels to keep it on the road.

The Australian Government mandated the fitment of ESC in all new cars and SUVs sold in Australia from November 2011, something worth rememberin­g when buying second-hand.

Sensors are increasing­ly being combined with cameras and radars to save you from yourself.

The good news is that such technology has trickled down quickly to the affordable end of the new car market. Only a few years ago, driver assistance technology was found only in up-market models made by pioneers in this field, such as Volvo and Mercedes-Benz.

Today it’s available, either standard or as an option, in cars and SUVs from affordable brands such as Toyota, Mazda, Hyundai and Holden.

Marketing department­s were already working overtime to come up with names for each new safety or driver-aid feature enabled by the proliferat­ion of sensors. Now they struggle to come up with memorable labels for families of digitally connected gear. Toyota Safety Sense, Mazda i-Activesens­e and Holden Eye are just a few.

All can be very confusing for the new-car buyer. Here’s a guide to help untangle the brochure babble …

AUTO BRAKING

When sensors “see” a collision hazard ahead, autonomous emergency braking slams on the car’s brakes.

Because it will brake, violently if required and without driver input, AEB is regarded as a big new developmen­t in safety with almost magical powers. And it is. This technology has been

shown to cut significan­tly the number of crashes, injuries and deaths on the road. It should also reduce your annual car insurance premium, as insurers recognise its ability to stop nose-to-tail fender benders.

AEB was born when car makers teamed video cameras with forward-facing radar sensors, which were often already in place to support adaptive or active cruise control (see below). Some recent examples use lidar, which works like radar but uses light waves instead of radio waves.

Signals from both sources are typically fed to an on-board computer. In the trade, this is known as sensor fusion. Software interprets informatio­n on the size, shape, speed and radar or lidar reflectivi­ty of objects ahead.

Taking into account other available data on the car’s speed and direction, it can identify a collision about to happen.

When it does, an AEB-equipped car will first beep or blink. If that doesn’t get the driver’s attention, the next stage is usually a gentle brake applicatio­n. If there’s still no response, AEB hits the brakes hard to avoid the collision or minimise impact speed.

Some models automatica­lly prepare for impact, tightening seat belts and taking other measures.

Some AEB set-ups are only designed for low-speed driving. If you see the word City in the name it’s a sure sign that a car’s AEB is this type. The Smart City Brake Support in the Mazda3 is a good example, operating from 4km/h-30km/h.

Others have a broader operating speed range. AEB in the latest Mercedes-Benz E-Class works up to 200km/h.

There’s also great variation in how the tech perceives hazards. AEB is designed to recognise a stationary or slowing vehicle ahead. The primary aim of the technology is to avoid rear-end collisions. More advanced versions identify, and automatica­lly brake for, pedestrian­s, cyclists and sometimes large fourlegged animals. Volvo often takes the lead in extending the powers of AEB in this way and Subaru does so at the more affordable end of the market.

TURN ASSIST

Audi’s Turn Assist uses AEB sensors to prevent an unobservan­t driver turning across the path of oncoming traffic. Now in the Q7 and A4 models, it operates at 2km/h10km/h — but only if the driver is indicating. Volvo has similar technology in its new XC90, S90 and V90.

ACTIVE CRUISE

Active (or adaptive) cruise control is a desirable driver aid, a genuine long-journey stress reliever that’s fitted in almost everything with AEB. At its best, active cruise not only keeps a safe distance to the car ahead in motorway driving but also automatica­lly brakes the car to a complete halt and accelerate­s again in stop-and-go traffic.

LANE WARNING

Another use for the video camera data stream required by AEB, this prompts or prods the driver to stay in the lane. The camera must be able to recognise lane markings, sometimes an impossibil­ity if the marking are poor or the light levels don’t suit the camera. Some lane keepers simply beep or blink and others vibrate or nudge the steering wheel. Some will even steer the car to prevent lane departure, though the driver can always override these inputs.

BLIND SPOTS

Blind spot warning and rear cross traffic alert are the generic names for tech that relies on extra, rear-mounted, wide-beam radar sensors.

BSW flashes a warning light in the external rear-view mirrors when there’s a vehicle in the blind spot.

RCTA intervenes when reversing slowly out of a parking spot or narrow street where the driver’s lateral vision is obstructed. Some simply emit visual and audible warnings. In Audi’s new mini SUV, the Q2, there will also be a jab on the brakes.

EMERGENCY AID

G-force sensors have been in cars for decades — they’re essential for airbags and ESC to work — and manufactur­ers are still thinking of extra uses. In a crash serious enough to inflate airbags, some cars automatica­lly contact emergency services, often via an on-board SIM and the mobile network, with helpful and potentiall­y lifesaving info, for example the precise location. BMW calls this tech Intelligen­t Emergency Call — at the lower end of the market, Ford has Emergency Assistance. Even simpler is the tech that senses hard braking and automatica­lly sets the hazard lights flashing to warn following drivers.

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