Driverless truck meant to improve safety in work zones
The crash trucks, fitted with a device called a truck-mounted attenuator, have been credited with saving lives. But the workers who drive them are inevitably placed in harm’s way, “literally waiting to be struck,” said
On Monday, Royal demonstrated its new driverless crash truck that it hopes will some day improve safety at work zones around the country. Two of the autonomous vehicles will make their debut at highway construction sites in
“Any time a driver can be removed from these vehicles in a very dangerous situation, and if the vehicle’s struck, there’s nobody inside of it to receive the damage or the injuries, that’s measuring success,” Roy said.
Truck-mounted attenuators have been around for 30 years. One study, published this year in the
There is considerable interest in autonomous truck-mounted attenuators, both for their potential to reduce risk and as a way to save on labor costs, one of the study’s author’s,
“Connected and autonomous vehicles in general are viewed as the future of surface transportation, and this technology may be one of the first ways in which it gets commercialized,” he said.
Google and traditional car companies have been developing self-driving vehicles, while
In Monday’s demonstration, a lead truck beamed information to Royal’s attenuator truck. The crash truck followed the lead truck around the parking lot of
Royal, the nation’s largest manufacturer of truck-mounted attenuators, is partnering on the driverless crash trucks with
Royal said the terms of the agreement with
Category: Science & Technology




