Tuesday, January 06, 2009
Ford's New Car Parks Itself
A new parking system takes the hard work out of parallel parking.
By Brittany Sauser
In these difficult times for the U.S. motor industry, Ford is evidently hoping that it can win back customers with technology that could take some of the stress out of getting behind the wheel. The company's new Active Park Assist system automatically maneuvers a vehicle into even the tightest parking space.
Parallel parking on a crowded city street is no easy task. Take
it from me: the streets of Boston make the "friendly bumper bump" a common affair (and I admit, I've been a perpetrator as often as I've been a victim). To simplify the task, many newer vehicles are
equipped with an optional electronic parking assist system--something
that my 2002 Honda Civic unfortunately does not have. The two most common systems use an array of sensors on the bumper to trigger a beep when you get too close to an
object, and video cameras that send pictures to a navigation screen
in the dashboard. Some of the pictures even suggest a steering direction.
Ford's Active Park Assist is
similar to a Toyota feature called Intelligent
Parking Assist that was first available on the 2007 Lexus LX, but in Toyota's
system, the driver still has to identify the exact parking spot using a navigation screen, as well as operate the brake.
The video below is a demonstration of how Ford's system
works. Here's a description from the press release:
-- The driver activates the system by pressing an instrument
panel button, which activates the ultrasonic sensors to measure and identify a
feasible parallel parking space.
-- The system then prompts the driver to accept the system
assistance to park.
-- The steering system then takes over and steers the car
into the parking space hands-free. The driver still shifts the transmission and
operates the gas and brake pedals.
-- A visual and/or audible driver interface advises the
driver about the proximity of other cars, objects and people and provides
instructions.
-- While the steering is all done automatically, the driver
remains responsible for safe parking and can interrupt the system by grasping
the steering wheel.
Ford's system will be available in mid-2009 as options on
the 2010 Lincoln MKS sedan and new Lincoln MKT crossover, but the company says
that by 2012, 90 percent of Ford, Lincoln, and Mercury models will be
equipped with the technology.
Video by Ford
Comments
You can see the somewhat tongue-in-cheek VW Touran Park Assist Commercial on YouTube.
breadedcod
01/06/2009
Posts:1
emjayess
01/06/2009
Posts:1
Maybe this is characteristic for the state Ford is in: behind the rest of the competition and as far as I can see, barely innovative... not a nice thing to say, but still...
R3D_Tech
01/07/2009
Posts:1
Shiladie
01/07/2009
Posts:55
Why not have the car drive itself completly and will can all become zombies that much quicker.
Yuk
Archie
01/09/2009
Posts:10
MickeyFouse
04/14/2009
Posts:47