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‘Adaptive cruise control does not always see motorcyclists’

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‘Adaptive cruise control does not always see motorcyclists’

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RDW: ‘Adaptive Cruise Control Does Not Always See Motorcyclists’
FEMA news by Wim Taal - March 16, 2018

Research by RDW (the Netherlands Vehicle Authority) shows that cars with an innovative driving system, such as an adaptive cruise control (ACC), are capable of noticing motorcycles. But when motorcycles are riding at the edge of their lane, the adaptive cruise control does not respond well to them.

In many tests, action had to be taken by the driver of the car to prevent a collision. That is why RDW warns users of such systems and motorcyclists to pay attention while driving, because the systems do not always see and react to small objects such as motorcycles.

RDW: ‘Car drivers should stay alert when driving with driver assistance systems.’

At the request of FEMA (Federation of European Motorcyclists’ Associations) and the Dutch motorcyclists’ organizations MAG and KNMV, RDW investigated the visibility of motorcycles for vehicles with innovative driving systems that control the speed of the vehicle.

Cars are increasingly equipped with innovative driving systems such as advanced driver assistance systems (ADAS) and adaptive cruise control. ADAS can support the driver while driving, with cameras behind the windscreen. They assist when a car involuntarily leaves a lane, they can assist with making an emergency stop, they improve visibility at night and they offer a 360-degree view and help with parking. They are the forerunners of autonomous driving (self-driving) cars. With adaptive cruise control, a car accelerates and slows down to keep a preset distance between the car and the vehicle in front.

RDW: ‘Adaptive Cruise Control Does Not Always See Motorcyclists’
FEMA news by Wim Taal - March 16, 2018

Research by RDW (the Netherlands Vehicle Authority) shows that cars with an innovative driving system, such as an adaptive cruise control (ACC), are capable of noticing motorcycles. But when motorcycles are riding at the edge of their lane, the adaptive cruise control does not respond well to them.

In many tests, action had to be taken by the driver of the car to prevent a collision. That is why RDW warns users of such systems and motorcyclists to pay attention while driving, because the systems do not always see and react to small objects such as motorcycles.

RDW: ‘Car drivers should stay alert when driving with driver assistance systems.’

At the request of FEMA (Federation of European Motorcyclists’ Associations) and the Dutch motorcyclists’ organizations MAG and KNMV, RDW investigated the visibility of motorcycles for vehicles with innovative driving systems that control the speed of the vehicle.

Cars are increasingly equipped with innovative driving systems such as advanced driver assistance systems (ADAS) and adaptive cruise control. ADAS can support the driver while driving, with cameras behind the windscreen. They assist when a car involuntarily leaves a lane, they can assist with making an emergency stop, they improve visibility at night and they offer a 360-degree view and help with parking. They are the forerunners of autonomous driving (self-driving) cars. With adaptive cruise control, a car accelerates and slows down to keep a preset distance between the car and the vehicle in front.

The research was carried out at the test center of RDW with various passenger cars. It has been investigated whether there are any differences between the detection of passenger cars and motorcycles. RDW also investigated the behavior of the system when the motorcyclist rides in different places in their lane. The manufacturers of all tested vehicles specifically warn about this situation in the manual of the car.

Volvo XC60 manual: ‘Small vehicles, such as motorcycles, or vehicles not driving in the center of the lane may remain undetected.’

The tests show that in some cases the system detects motorcycles at a greater distance than it detects a passenger car. In all cases, the systems see the other vehicles early enough for the adaptive cruise control to work. Only if a motorcycle rides at or near the edge of the lane the system fails to see the motorcycle. In those cases, action had to be taken by the driver of the car to prevent a collision.

Dolf Willigers, FEMA’s general secretary: “We are very happy that RDW agrees with us that this issue has to be taken seriously and this report shows that our worries about the visibility of motorcyclists by advanced driver assistance systems are justified. The RDW findings prove that we are still a long way from safe, (semi-) automatic driving cars.”

Dolf continues: “This RDW report proves to us that advanced driver assistance systems are in no way ready to be trusted. Both car drivers and motorcyclists should be made aware of this. A written warning in a car manual is not enough. These assistance systems have to be tested properly and this should be part of the type approval test procedure for cars. A car with systems that fail this test procedure, should not be allowed on public roads.”

So what’s next for FEMA? Dolf: “We will continue our talks with the experts at RDW, but we will obviously also talk about this with our contacts at the European Commission and the European Parliament.”

Source: RDW

   Update Reply
Ragnar @ 19/03/2018 18:32  

Wasn't there a case in the USA a few weeks ago where a rider was hit by a car. They blamed the rider for being in the cars way, as they both went for the same bit of road. ?

   Update Reply
JP @ 19/03/2018 18:55  

Yep there was

   Update Reply
Ragnar @ 19/03/2018 19:28  

In news today;

Uber trialling self drive cars.

A self-driving car has killed a pedestrian for the first time ever, Phoenix, USA.

Think the trial needs to stop. FULL STOP!

   Update Reply
Lindsay @ 19/03/2018 21:25  

In my untrained but highly biased opinion you can not mix automated vehicles and human controlled vehicles.

If they continue to try this we are going to see a lot of injury sand deaths. The sad thing is I think they will see its humans at fault every time and eventually ban human control over vehicles. the money that the tech developers have will always win over Common sense.

   Update Reply
Deleted Member @ 19/03/2018 23:55  

Planes don't need pilots but would you get on if they removed them ?

   Update Reply
JP @ 20/03/2018 03:03  

I think that anyone who goes in to a showroom to ask about these car should have their licence cut up on the spot

   Update Reply
Ragnar @ 20/03/2018 06:49  

We already have forms of transport that requires no muppet input. There called busses and taxis.

If you dont want to control your own vehicle why they hell would you buy a driverless one. Its cheaper to use a taxi.

   Update Reply
Deleted Member @ 20/03/2018 07:34  

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