Intertraffic World 2018

Page 290

288 | LAST WORD

Having been commissioned by the DfT and Highways England to carry out the first real-world truck platooning trials in the UK, can you explain how communications technology is used to connect the vehicles? The project team is using wi-fi, but not the type of you and I might associate with our homes. Instead it is a bespoke industrial version, with additional cybersecurity. It has been developed to function seamlessly, providing a local network around the platoon when the vehicles are in the convoy, and when they couple or decouple. But what really makes it stand out is its ability to multichannel, meaning that it will always be possible to establish a ‘strong’ wi-fi signal between the vehicles, regardless of weather conditions and in remote geographies – it can operate with poor mobile network signals or where they are non-existent.

Richard Cuerden, director of the TRL Academy, on why the transportation consultancy is a key player in delivering game-changing mobility breakthroughs… such as truck platooning How do you ensure that the Academy continues to be at the forefront of advanced transportation innovation? There are a multitude of functions that I administer, but in my role, there are three which take priority. The first is to ensure the organization is ‘match-fit’. In other words, I making sure our staff have the relevant skills and experience and fit into a collaborative multidisciplinary environment. Part of the Academy’s role is to nurture talent so our people can fully realize their potential. Secondly, it is imperative that we invest our annual research budget strategically into real-world projects where our skills and experience can make a difference. Thirdly, like all research laboratories, from an accountability and governance perspective, we have a responsibility to the client to provide and maintain a regime of rigorous and exacting quality controls testing, and one of my tasks is to oversee the technical review process.

Intertraffic World | Annual Showcase 2018

TRL’s main commercial partners are DAF Trucks, Ricardo (a UK engineering consultancy) and DHL. What are their roles? DAF will be supplying custom-made right-hand drive versions of their market-leading commercial trucks for use in the trial and will be working closely with Ricardo utilizing their specialist engineering knowledge to modify and adapt these trucks to work with the state-of-the-art technology required for the platooning trials. Both companies bring with them a wealth of knowledge and practical experience gained from the European Platooning Challenge and Ricardo also worked with us closely on the development of the initial HGV Platooning feasibility study in 2014. DHL are our commercial partner and their support is essential in providing the ‘real-world’ aspect to this trial. We will not only be demonstrating platooning technology but using it day-to-day, embedded in the logistics of DHL’s freight deliveries. Some have raised concerns that the technology could lead to truck drivers being made obsolete. Are these fears justified? I certainly don’t see platooning impacting negatively on driver’s prospects in the short to mid-term. You will always need a driver at the wheel for security reasons. Secondly, platooning will only work on A-roads and motorway networks, meaning drivers will still be required to manually operate their vehicles on local road networks, which are the origin and destination points of each delivery run. Thirdly, drivers have an encyclopedic knowledge of freight logistics and supply chain operations, which machine learning and AI systems simply cannot match, at present. Personally, I see platooning as a technology that will work alongside drivers and assist them in their role rather than replacing them. They will become more like pilots, in that they will take on a very active role at the beginning and at the end of a journey, with the ability to switch their vehicles to an autopilot setting on motorways. n


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Articles inside

Last word

3min
pages 290-292

Advertisers’ directory

28min
pages 281-289

Smarter city management

5min
pages 276-277

Drivers of urban mobility

4min
pages 278-280

Driving fleets in the cloud

5min
pages 274-275

Operation: future mobility

3min
pages 272-273

Cities of the future

4min
pages 270-271

The future of parking

3min
pages 250-251

Enhancing mobility with IoT

3min
pages 266-267

Smarter traffic solutions

4min
pages 263-265

The path to smarter mobility

6min
pages 268-269

Streetwise parking and ITS

4min
pages 252-255

More than parking payment

2min
pages 248-249

Driving your digital future

3min
pages 246-247

Get out of the loop

1min
page 245

RFID: parking and tolling

2min
pages 242-244

IoT: Smart mobility’s enabler

4min
pages 240-241

Automatic parking systems

5min
pages 238-239

Smarter parking payment

1min
pages 234-235

How to become smarter

4min
pages 236-237

It pays to recycle cash

3min
pages 232-233

A novel shopping experience

2min
pages 230-231

Airport parking solutions

5min
pages 228-229

Big ideas

5min
pages 218-222

Multimodal solutions

4min
pages 223-225

Cash-friendly technology

5min
pages 226-227

Crossing streets without signals

2min
pages 208-211

Space man

9min
pages 212-217

No more drunk drivers

5min
pages 204-205

Future sign supports

2min
pages 202-203

Safety in words

3min
pages 199-201

Safe and pleasant cycle paths

5min
pages 192-195

Safety visions

4min
pages 196-198

Fighting death on our roads

10min
pages 182-191

Simple smart-city upgrades

3min
pages 174-175

Two-in-one enforcement

5min
pages 172-173

A close eye on traffic

3min
pages 176-181

ITS and solid-state lidars

5min
pages 169-171

Saving lives with science

3min
pages 166-168

Designing the best traffic lights

3min
pages 154-155

Back to the future

4min
pages 162-164

Increasing safety with ALPR

3min
pages 160-161

The right lenses for CMOS

3min
pages 152-153

Road scanners

3min
page 165

Traffic manager vision

7min
pages 158-159

Airport traffic control

4min
pages 146-149

Passport for cars

4min
pages 150-151

A shortcut to control room cost-efficiency

5min
pages 140-143

Sensing road safety

2min
pages 138-139

Winning the crime battle

3min
pages 144-145

City-friendly cameras

6min
pages 133-135

Unlocking the value of data

3min
pages 136-137

Seeing the bigger picture

3min
pages 130-132

Weight to go

3min
pages 128-129

Road watch

5min
pages 125-127

Precision P-Iris lenses

3min
pages 118-119

Connected transit signal priority

4min
pages 120-121

Mobile enforcement of tolls

3min
pages 114-115

The best of both worlds

3min
pages 122-124

The eyes of ITS

5min
pages 116-117

Technology in motion

4min
pages 112-113

Route zero

1min
pages 110-111

Better measurement in motion

4min
pages 108-109

Next-generation traffic control

4min
pages 105-107

Simpler management

4min
pages 102-104

Can ITS fight terror in Moscow?

6min
pages 96-101

The VMS that never sleeps

5min
pages 84-87

C-ITS in cities of the future

7min
pages 88-95

Rural road watch

3min
pages 82-83

Fast evaluation of road assets

4min
pages 80-81

Choosing wisely

4min
pages 77-79

An innovative barrier solution

3min
pages 74-76

Built for purpose

4min
pages 61-63

Smarter ways to work

3min
pages 70-71

Cushion the blow

3min
pages 68-69

Testing visibility in the field

4min
pages 64-65

Marked improvement

4min
pages 58-60

Reliable rumble strip creation

4min
pages 56-57

Smog solutions

11min
pages 22-31

Leading Europe into the future

9min
pages 14-21

Pacific express

6min
pages 44-49

Underground revolutions

4min
pages 38-43

Environmentally friendly signs

4min
pages 52-53

The personal touch

4min
pages 12-13

Better ways to hog the road

4min
pages 50-51

Bringing MaaS to the UK

4min
pages 32-37
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