Autonomous Vehicles Are a Snoozefest and Ford Engineers Can't Stay Awake

Steph Willems
by Steph Willems

Apparently, it’s not just Uber drivers who enjoy extended naps behind the wheel.

Ford engineers, tapped to put the company’s self-driving technology on the fast track to production, are taking the off-ramp to Slumberville so often that the company has had to get other engineers to devise ways of keeping them awake.

It turns out that riding in the driver’s seat of a self-driving car is as conducive to glassy-eyed lethargy as reading about “mobility solutions.”

Speaking to Bloomberg, Ford product development chief Raj Nair said the company has tried everything to keep engineers — who are supposed to monitor the vehicle’s actions and take over should something go haywire — awake, to no avail.

Audible warnings, lights and vibrating seats and steering wheels failed to keep the drivers from dozing off. Ford eventually decided to place a second engineer in the vehicle, but the same problem occurred. Maintaining “situational awareness” proved difficult, Nair said.

“These are trained engineers who are there to observe what’s happening,” he explained. “But it’s human nature that you start trusting the vehicle more and more and that you feel you don’t need to be paying attention.”

It looks like fully autonomous cars, once available to the public, will be used more for naps than doing the nasty. Don’t see the USA in a Chevrolet, the tagline might be.

Back at Ford, the futile effort to keep engineers lucid prompted CEO Mark Fields to announce the impending death of the steering wheel. Last summer, the company said it wants to market a fully-autonomous vehicle that requires no driver inputs by 2021. In its view, Level 3 semi-autonomous driving isn’t worth bothering with. It’s Level 5 or go home.

Other players in the tech/automotive industry feel the same way, as combining a car that’s only somewhat capable of driving on its own and a driver prone to boredom and slumber could lead to more accidents, not less. If drivers are still required to keep their eyes on the road and take the wheel in certain situations, they can’t be bobbing for apples.

Steph Willems
Steph Willems

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  • MaintenanceCosts I wish more vehicles in our market would be at or under 70" wide. Narrowness makes everything easier in the city.
  • El scotto They should be supping with a very, very long spoon.
  • El scotto [list=1][*]Please make an EV that's not butt-ugly. Not Jaguar gorgeous but Buick handsome will do.[/*][*] For all the golf cart dudes: A Tesla S in Plaid mode will be the fastest ride you'll ever take.[/*][*]We have actual EV owners posting on here. Just calmly stated facts and real world experience. This always seems to bring out those who would argue math.[/*][/list=1]For some people an EV will never do, too far out in the country, taking trips where an EV will need recharged, etc. If you own a home and can charge overnight an EV makes perfect sense. You're refueling while you're sleeping.My condo association is allowing owners to install chargers. You have to pay all of the owners of the parking spaces the new electric service will cross. Suggested fee is 100$ and the one getting a charger pays all the legal and filing fees. I held out for a bottle of 30 year old single malt.Perhaps high end apartments will feature reserved parking spaces with chargers in the future. Until then non home owners are relying on public charge and one of my neighbors is in IT and he charges at work. It's call a perk.I don't see company owned delivery vehicles that are EV's. The USPS and the smiley boxes should be the 1st to do this. Nor are any of our mega car dealerships doing this and but of course advertising this fact.I think a great many of the EV haters haven't came to the self-actualization that no one really cares what you drive. I can respect and appreciate what you drive but if I was pushed to answer, no I really don't care what you drive. Before everyone goes into umbrage over my last sentence, I still like cars. Especially yours.I have heated tiles in my bathroom and my kitchen. The two places you're most likely to be barefoot. An EV may fall into to the one less thing to mess with for many people.Macallan for those who were wondering.
  • EBFlex The way things look in the next 5-10 years no. There are no breakthroughs in battery technology coming, the charging infrastructure is essentially nonexistent, and the price of entry is still way too high.As soon as an EV can meet the bar set by ICE in range, refueling times, and price it will take off.
  • Jalop1991 Way to bury the lead. "Toyota to offer two EVs in the states"!
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