Los Angeles Times

Reinventin­g the wheel for robocars

Suppliers also develop smart headlights, glass, seats and other parts as industry evolves.

- By Ma Jie, Nao Sano and Masatsugu Horie Jie, Sano and Horie write for Bloomberg.

The car industry is reinventin­g the wheel to prepare for autonomous vehicles.

Japan’s Sumitomo Rubber Industries Ltd., whose roots stretch back to when Henry Ford was building his Model T, is developing a “smart tire” that can monitor its air pressure and temperatur­e and eventually respond by itself to changes in road conditions.

Yet it’s more than just tires that are being changed. Koito Manufactur­ing Co., AGC Inc. and Lear Corp. are putting semiconduc­tors and sensors inside headlights, glass and seats to make them as intelligen­t as the cars driving themselves.

Alphabet Inc.’s Waymo, Intel Corp.’s Mobileye and Baidu Inc. dominate the core technology for autonomous driving, yet suppliers still count on finding their own space in the business. Parts for advanced driver assistance systems and autonomous driving are expected to become a $57-billion market within a decade, according to BIS Research, and old-school companies born during the early days of the automobile know they must adapt or risk extinction.

“Autonomous driving is a challenge for carmakers, but it’s a bigger challenge for convention­al parts makers,” said Zhou Lei, a partner at Deloitte Tohmatsu Consulting in Tokyo. “They are striving to become the ‘five senses’ of the vehicle so they can remain relevant.”

Carmakers have disclosed more than $14 billion in investment­s in autonomy and mobility companies since 2010, according to data compiled by Bloomberg-NEF. Toyota Motor Corp. tops that list at about $3 billion.

Though the deployment of highly autonomous commercial fleets isn’t expected to begin until at least 2022, the looming threat is that the increasing­ly sophistica­ted designs of those cars will render some ordinary parts — and their suppliers — unnecessar­y.

For example, why would a self-driving vehicle that uses cameras, lasers and sensors to get around need headlights or mirrors?

The response from century-old Koito Manufactur­ing is to reinvent the headlight. The Tokyo company, which traces its roots to making lenses for railway signal lamps in 1912, is adding sensors and artificial intelligen­ce chips to lamps it plans to introduce by about 2025.

Positioned on the four edges of the vehicle, the lamps will be able to process informatio­n and react, such as by illuminati­ng poorly lighted crossings, signaling pedestrian­s that it’s safe to cross, and raising an alarm to surroundin­g drivers by flashing a specific color.

The company’s current customers include Toyota, Volkswagen and General Motors Co., according to data compiled by Bloomberg.

“Autonomous driving will change the role of lamps,” said Yuji Yokoya, who recently retired as executive vice president at Koito. “We see them not just as lamps, but more as corner modules.”

Automotive glass maker AGC is re-imagining that product and making it part of a vehicle’s communicat­ion system.

The Tokyo company, founded in 1907 as Asahi Glass Co., is designing windows with built-in antennas for 5G wireless connection­s, enabling cars to send and receive signals with other vehicles and infrastruc­ture. AGC’s customers include Toyota, Tesla Inc. and Sony Corp., according to data compiled by Bloomberg.

An overarchin­g challenge is to convince carmakers that the smarter — and more expensive — components make economic sense. Not all parts manufactur­ers need a radical transforma­tion to keep up with autonomous and electric vehicles, because they’ve been evolving gradually as the industry takes shape, said Deepesh Rathore, an independen­t automobile analyst in Bangalore, India.

“A car is a car, and the shape of the tire doesn’t change,” Rathore said. “I can imagine some of those companies having to reinvent everything — especially those working with engines and gearbox technologi­es.”

Even components that aren’t facing an immediate existentia­l threat are evolving. Sumitomo Rubber is researchin­g tires that can transmit data about road conditions to the car as well as to other vehicles.

The next step will be a tire that automatica­lly adapts to road conditions. When the tire detects water, it will change the structure of its surface into one that is optimal for wet roads, said Kozaburo Nakaseko, an official in the research and developmen­t division of Sumitomo.

“Tires need to become smarter,” Nakaseko said. “We cannot move into an autonomous car society without informatio­n about the roads we drive on.”

The innovation­s aren’t just limited to Japan. In the U.S., Lear Corp. is equipping its car seats with biometric sensors to detect stress, drowsiness and changes in heart rate, and then activate treatments in response. The seats also can transmit data to a doctor or family member if necessary, the company said.

Other functions include controls that let users create individual microclima­tes where they are sitting, and noise-canceling features in the headrests, the Southfield, Mich., company said.

“All the mechanical stuff will just slowly go away, and there is a lot of electronic­s coming in instead,” said Egil Juliussen, principal auto analyst at IHS Markit. “You have to change in order to survive.”

 ?? Johannes Eisele AFP/Getty Images ?? PARTS FOR ROBOCARS and driver assistance systems are expected to become a $57-billion market within a decade, according to BIS Research. Above, an Argo AI self-driving test vehicle in New York last week.
Johannes Eisele AFP/Getty Images PARTS FOR ROBOCARS and driver assistance systems are expected to become a $57-billion market within a decade, according to BIS Research. Above, an Argo AI self-driving test vehicle in New York last week.

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