SafeSpeed wrote:
Roger wrote:
I think there is possibly one scenario where this will help. It is... where the driver is speedo-gazing, thanks to scameras

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In fact, provided there are three independent sensor systems (to avoid false alarms from birds etc), and provided the brakes are applied when a collision is otherwise unavoidable (ie, the steering if placed on lock could not miss the obstacle, and the vehicle steering is already within a tad of centre (ie driver not trying to steer round the obstacle), and rate of closure is such that thingy in front WILL be hit, I could tolerate a damage-limitation emergency braking system then - much like the airbag - to mitigate the inevitable. That would leave the driver in full control until he'd lost it.
I very much like the idea of using the electronics in a last ditch attempt to mimimise damage, but...
I think there are too many variables affectig braking distance for this to work. Wet/dry road and uphill/downhill are pretty big effects. Then there's tyre condition and half a dozen other smaller effects.
Yes - so the last ditch system will ONLY bang on the brakes when approx 1g is insufficient to stop before the gap closes and it will release the pedal in the unlikely event of the obstacle taking off.
SafeSpeed wrote:
Then there's movement of the collision object vehicle. Our driver may know that the collision object will have moved before we arrive - I don't see how the electronics can know this.
No it can't, hence the need to not apply the brakes until all other driver-induced options have been given every chance.
SafeSpeed wrote:
On occasion we might plan to drive into parked cars to avoid a pedestrian or even accept a collision ahead to avoid one from the side. I agree that such situations are rare indeed, but they do exist.
Agreed also - so the system should only cut in when the steering is near straight ahead and the inevitable obstacle....
SafeSpeed wrote:
And how is the damn system going to behave if I have the temerity to try to drive in snowy conditions?
Unless we also have the temerity to do "dry road" speeds on the snow, the system will never cut in.