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Bob Lange
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But GM’s contribution to VII in Michigan does not end with data on forward collision warnings. OnStar also could contribute data from the 300,000 calls made every month to its new turn-by-turn navigation assistance service, as well as data from the monthly vehicle diagnostic e-mail that it sends subscribers.
For example, the vehicle diagnostics have allowed GM to monitor tire-pressure signals on a fleet of about 600,000 units over the last five months.
“This is really useful information – a remarkable result,” Lange says, calling the data vastly superior to what previous surveys have yielded, because the vehicles providing the information are equipped with the tire-pressure monitor systems now required by law.
Lange reports that about 85% of the fleet showed proper inflation levels, while less than 1% of vehicles showed dangerously low levels.
In other news surrounding GM VII program, Lange says the auto maker has developed roughly seven solutions – algorithms that provide signal information for communication between vehicles or a roadside transponder – for the 38 use-case opportunities it outlined a year ago.
A use-case opportunity occurs when, for example, vehicle-to-vehicle communications could warn drivers of a dangerous lane change, or when a vehicle-to-infrastructure interaction would warn of an approaching construction zone.
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And if a driver is insufficiently attentive to an escalation in warning signals, Lange says, GM conceivably could self-actuate a braking system to prevent a collision.
“The whole idea of VII or V2V communications is to increase the circumstantial, situational awareness of individual drivers under a whole variety of operating conditions,” Lange says.
Other solutions include the potential to prevent intersection collisions and the ability to alert emergency services vehicles of approaching roadway conditions.
But deployment of these sorts of communication technologies depends greatly on market penetration, Lange says.
“We’re going to have to have significant numbers of vehicles in service quickly,” Lange says.
Previously, discussions over these kinds of communications systems focused on placing the technologies in new vehicles. But at today’s replacement rate, Lange says, that route would take upwards of 30 years to make an impact.
“We need to think hard about how we are going to deploy these technologies backward into the existing fleet,” he says. “That means aftermarket applications in a big way.”
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