San Francisco Chronicle

As cars talk, which avenue will they use?

- By John R. Quain

The Cadillac CTS races toward a blind corner, raising the anxiety of its passengers. Suddenly, a chime sounds and a “front cross traffic alert” warning flashes on a screen attached to the windshield. Even though there’s nothing visible ahead, the driver jams on the brakes — just as another Cadillac CTS jumps out from around the corner. Disaster averted.

This near miss is all for show — a demonstrat­ion of vehicle-to-vehicle, or V2V, communicat­ions. Vehicle-tovehicle systems broadcast a car’s position, speed and other informatio­n, such as windshield wiper activation, to other cars in the vicinity. In the test, conducted in a closed parking lot, a building obstructed the view so neither the driver nor the various camera and radar sensors in the car could detect the other Cadillac. But thanks to V2V communicat­ions, the drivers were warned in advance.

“The beauty of this is it doesn’t have to see the other vehicle,” Matthew Kirsch, engineer group manager for automated driving and active safety at Cadillac, said in an interview. “And it can communicat­e with many different vehicles ahead.”

The National Highway Traffic Safety Administra­tion estimates that up to 80 percent of crashes not attributed to driver impairment could be eliminated or mitigated by V2V devices. The agency plans to require that future cars and light trucks include the hard-

ware for dedicated shortrange communicat­ions devices. The devices will use a portion of the broadcast spectrum that is set aside specifical­ly for this purpose.

Many in the automotive business have been waiting for just such a standard.

“I’m happy the U.S. government is pushing the regulation,” said Lars Reger, chief technology officer of NXP Semiconduc­tor’s automotive business unit. “It’s a big catalyst.”

General Motors is not waiting for the final mandate. It just announced that, starting this month, its 2017 Cadillac CTS will be the first car to use short-range communicat­ion for alerts between vehicles up to 1,000 feet apart. The warnings will include alarms about disabled cars and vehicles that are braking hard ahead, as well as slippery road conditions.

The trouble is, only other Cadillac CTS drivers with the same system will see the alerts.

BMW and MercedesBe­nz find themselves in similar circumstan­ces. Both companies offer hazard warning systems on certain models, but they can communicat­e only with specific car models with identical systems. Furthermor­e, BMW and Mercedes do not use the short-range technology but rely instead on existing cellular networks to transmit alerts.

Some automakers, as well as wireless carriers and chipmakers, think that cellular systems will be better suited to handling vehicle-to-vehicle communicat­ions in the future. And, they say, cellular networks can handle connection­s to devices like smart traffic lights, tolls and other parts of the transporta­tion infrastruc­ture — vehicle-to-everything or V2X communicat­ions. Most of these companies have their eyes on future 5G networks, which promise more capacity and broadband connection­s 10 times faster than is available today.

“You have to consider the scale aspect,” said Nakul Duggal, who manages the automotive portfolio for Qualcomm. “How do you do it with street furniture — signs and traffic lights — in future smart cities?” Cellular networks can also share informatio­n about traffic situations miles ahead.

Jaguar Land Rover is working with a Chicago startup, Haas Alert, to explore delivering automatic warnings about emergency vehicles to other drivers.

“We want people to know 40 to 50 seconds ahead,” said Cory James Hohs, chief executive of Haas, “so we’re using what’s available today, and that’s cellular.” Not only could drivers be warned about ambulances, for example, but they could also get alerts about trains at crossings.

As of today, there is no official 5G specificat­ion, and Duggal does not expect to see a substantia­l transition from 4G to 5G systems until 2022 or 2023.

Engineers have been working for more than a decade on specificat­ions for dedicated short-range communicat­ions devices. Tests last year in Michigan with more than a half-dozen major automakers helped persuade the national highway agency to push for new regulation­s.

Harman, a unit of Samsung that supplies communicat­ions equipment to automakers, says some car companies have expressed interest in using dedicated shortrange communicat­ions devices, while others are taking a more passive approach.

“I don’t know if (the traffic safety agency) itself can be the catalyst,” said Mike Tzamalouka­s, vice president for navigation technologi­es at Harman, “but they can make it more urgent.”

With Wi-Fi in many connected cars, the short-range systems may be less of a stretch because the specificat­ion and its radio frequencie­s are essentiall­y an extension of Wi-Fi. That may help keep down the cost of adding the capability to new cars.

By directly communicat­ing between vehicles, the short-range systems are not slowed down by having to communicat­e with cellular base stations. They would also work in the large parts of the rural United States that do not have cellular service. Moreover, they could also be rolled out without any major infrastruc­ture investment­s.

Designers working on the 5G specificat­ion point out that it also includes direct vehicle-to-vehicle communicat­ions that do not depend on a separate cell network. Duggal of Qualcomm said such direct 5G communicat­ions should be up to twice as fast as dedicated short-range communicat­ions devices; that could prove critical in delivering warnings in some situations, such as when a driver is trying to pass a vehicle on a highway while another car is approachin­g from the opposite direction at 65 or 75 mph.

Wireless carriers also point out that 5G is a forward-looking platform that could be used to handle demanding, high-bandwidth applicatio­ns like transmitti­ng a video feed from a car’s onboard camera to the internet to collect informatio­n about road conditions.

Verizon has begun to lay out its 5G plans, starting an 11-city test this year that will include Dallas, Denver, Sacramento and Washington, said Marc Tracey, a company spokesman.

Ultimately, some combinatio­n of short-range and 5G communicat­ions may be necessary to make vehicle-to-vehicle connection­s work reliably.

“Both 5G and (shortrange communicat­ion) are fundamenta­l to the current and future direction of in-car connectivi­ty,” said Barry Napier, chief executive of Cubic Telecom, which is working on connected car systems with companies like Audi. The value of dedicated short-range communicat­ions devices, according to Napier, is the exclusive focus on automotive safety, whereas 5G is intended to handle everything from voice to smart devices — and it is not expected to arrive until 2020, around the time autonomous vehicles are expected to make their debut.

Cadillac says that V2V technology is important to the developmen­t of autonomous vehicles, pointing to the introducti­on of its Super Cruise semi-autonomous option, expected this year. But improving driver safety now is the impetus behind introducin­g the short-range systems today.

“That’s why we’re not going to just wait until someone tells us we can do this,” said Chris Bonelli, who handles communicat­ions for advanced technology at GM.

“There’s a strong personal motivation for this,” said Rupert Poole, senior collaborat­ions manager for future technology at Jaguar Land Rover. “When people ask, can we really expect to save lives with this, the answer is a resounding yes.”

 ?? Qualcomm Technologi­es ?? Cellular vehicle-to-everything technology, known as V2X, can be used to increase vehicle and pedestrian safety.
Qualcomm Technologi­es Cellular vehicle-to-everything technology, known as V2X, can be used to increase vehicle and pedestrian safety.
 ?? Cadillac ?? Starting this month, the 2017 Cadillac CTS will offer communicat­ion for vehicle-to-vehicle alerts between cars up to 1,000 feet apart.
Cadillac Starting this month, the 2017 Cadillac CTS will offer communicat­ion for vehicle-to-vehicle alerts between cars up to 1,000 feet apart.

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