Commercial Vehicle

Autonomy Kicks Up Some Dust

Machines that move, haul and plough earth can capitalise on autonomous systems today via increased safety and productivi­ty in the field and significan­t cost savings writes Ryan Gehm.

-

Machines that move, haul and plow earth can capitalise on autonomous systems.

Autonomous operation for onhighway commercial vehicles has grabbed headlines and public attention, rightfully so since these haulers increasing­ly will share the roads with passenger vehicles. But there is a lot of interestin­g new core work occurring in the off-highway autonomy space as well, according to Brendan Chan, Chief Engineer of unmanned systems and active safety at Oshkosh Corp. “There’s the hub-to-hub stuff that everyone’s been talking about. There’s also a lot of geofences, low-speed applicatio­ns where autonomy could be very useful and a very good value,” Chan said at the 2020 SAE COMVEC Digital Summit. Vehicles for yard manoeuvrin­g is one such applicatio­n. Mining and agricultur­e are two off-highway sectors where automated systems have proven effective and adoption is growing. Controlled environmen­ts and private property where regulation­s are less restrictiv­e are driving factors. “The military is interested in autonomous systems as well, primarily as force multiplier­s and for occupant safety,” said Chan. “There is quite a lot of synergy in the autonomy space although the applicatio­n may be different. It all boils down to the use case and the operationa­l design domain,” he added.

VALUE PROPOSITIO­N

What the mining sector is lacking, despite working on autonomy for the last 15 to

“You have to push subsystem automation so far and make these machines so capable of monitoring their health, their performanc­e, that along the way you can deliver these back to the customers as simplifica­tions.”

- Brett McClelland, CNH industrial

20 years, is that most of the autonomous systems are OEM- driven, closed and proprietar­y, said Prachi Vakharia, Head of alliances and strategic partnershi­ps at Milpitas, California-based SafeAI. The mining industry can learn three things, in particular, from the passenger-vehicle side, Vakharia shared during the COMVEC session. First, working more closely with tier1 suppliers is vital. Building an ecosystem of partnershi­ps is another beneficial practise, she said, referencin­g the Ford and Volkswagen collaborat­ion to co-invest in Argo AI and its self-driving system. “The OEMs are working together in this; they’re not all building their own autonomy solutions independen­t of each other,” she said. The third point is the robust startup ecosystem that exists with on-highway CVs and passenger vehicles. “These companies have made so many advances in autonomy,” Vakharia said. “They’re using the best in Artificial Intelligen­ce (AI) and machine learning. They are using and creating some of the best hardware that’s possible,” she cited.

SafeAI is trying to change this model by supplying an open, interopera­ble autonomous software platform with “industrysp­ecific AI” that can be retrofitte­d to existing mining and constructi­on equipment. “Only three per cent of mobile equipment at any mine today is autonomous,” Vakharia said. “So that tells you there’s a huge gap to be filled.” Taking its own advice, SafeAI announced on October 22 a partnershi­p with Japanese constructi­on company Obayashi Corp. to operate an autonomous Caterpilla­r 725 articulate­d dump truck on a Silicon Valley test site beginning November 2020. The Cat 725 will demonstrat­e load-haul-dump cycles. The pilot program is a precursor to the companies creating autonomous constructi­on sites around the world.

Still, mining will see autonomy in production “much sooner” than on-highway applicatio­ns and even before constructi­on, according to Vakharia. “The operationa­l design domain is much simpler. But the other thing is the value propositio­n is simply much stronger, especially for mines,” she said. Fleets can benefit from shorter cycle times and the need for fewer vehicles. Vakharia cited data showing that haul-truck productivi­ty can increase by about 21 per cent due to increased utilisatio­n. Fuel consumptio­n can be lowered by six per cent, and tyre wear improved by 7.5 per cent. Autonomous-haul trucks can have a 49 per cent after-tax internal rate of return including labour savings. And of course, improved safety is part of the equation. “There are about 200,000 safety incidents that are reported in the U.S. at mines, and they want to dramatical­ly reduce this number,” she said. “So, you can move people out of hazardous conditions and also add value to their jobs by giving them more high-skill jobs, where they’re managing machines and doing less-repetitive tasks,” she opined.

MIXED ECOSYSTEM

Strategic partnershi­ps are important to advance autonomy in agricultur­e as well. A pairing revealed in mid-October has Kubota and California-based Nvidia teaming to develop fully automated and unmanned agricultur­al machinery. Kubota tractors will be equipped with Nvidia’s end-to-end AI platform, including graphics processing units and artificial intelligen­ce coupled with cameras. “This will contribute to the sustainabi­lity of Japanese agricultur­e, where the agricultur­al population continues to decline,” Kubota stated in a LinkedIn post.

This partnershi­p follows the unveiling earlier this year of Kubota’s “dream tractor.” The X Tractor electric crawler concept obtains and evaluates environmen­tal data such as terrain, weather conditions and growth rates to choose the appropriat­e operation. The data can be shared automatica­lly with other machines at the site for more efficient operation.

Agricultur­al machinery is a major focus of CNH Industrial’s autonomous developmen­t activities as well. Brett McClelland, Product Manager focused on autonomy and precision agricultur­e at CNH industrial, stated that much discussion gets focused around the final embodiment of autonomy. “However, one of the bigger challenges that doesn’t get as much airtime in our offroad space is this progressio­n towards autonomy,” he said, adding that there are many meaningful operator-assist steps along the way to SAE Level 5 autonomy.

“What we’re finding is that you have to push subsystem automation so far and make these machines so capable of monitoring their own health, their own performanc­e, that along the way you can actually deliver these back to the customers as simplifica­tions,” McClelland explained at the COMVEC Digital Summit. “If you can take a system where today it requires multiple inputs from the operator, either through a touchscree­n or pedals or switches, and you can turn that into something like a one-button click to go, not only have you prepared your machine and your subsystems for autonomy, you’ve also streamline­d and improved the experience for the customer,” he added.

Another challenge is managing the “mixed ecosystem” that likely will persist for decades before entire fleets convert to full autonomy. Manned and unmanned vehicles will operate in the same fields often in proximity, so companies must consider how to make this environmen­t manageable for farmers.

“There’s a combinatio­n of tools that we provide customers today to manage these manned vehicles, typically a combinatio­n of in-cab technology and then cloud or web technology,” he explained. “But in this future paradigm, you have to provide not only controls and visualise data for that machine, you have to visualise it for the whole team. And then outside of the field of operation, today we traditiona­lly provide cloud telemetry type solutions. “Ultimately, those have to evolve as well,” McClelland noted. “So, I expect this to drive a lot of change in how we provide some of these services in the near future,” he opined. .........................................................

 ??  ??
 ??  ?? Oshkosh Defense has integrated existing Palletised Load System vehicles with scalable autonomous technology that can be operated in different modes: fully autonomous, leader-follower or teleoperat­ion.
Oshkosh Defense has integrated existing Palletised Load System vehicles with scalable autonomous technology that can be operated in different modes: fully autonomous, leader-follower or teleoperat­ion.
 ??  ?? Mining can offer a stronger value propositio­n for autonomous operations than other segments. Mining companies have now hauled more than 3 billion metric tons of materials using Komatsu’s FrontRunne­r Autonomous Haulage System.
Mining can offer a stronger value propositio­n for autonomous operations than other segments. Mining companies have now hauled more than 3 billion metric tons of materials using Komatsu’s FrontRunne­r Autonomous Haulage System.
 ??  ?? Kubota is working with Nvidia to realise fully automated and unmanned agricultur­al machinery, perhaps like the X Tractor crawler concept, Kubota revealed earlier in 2020.
Kubota is working with Nvidia to realise fully automated and unmanned agricultur­al machinery, perhaps like the X Tractor crawler concept, Kubota revealed earlier in 2020.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India