기술

발레오 사의 자동 주차 시스템

jayjean 2014. 7. 16. 09:03

프랑스 발레오 사의 자동 주차 시스템 valeo valet 시연 소식.

12개의 초음파 센서, 4백만 화소 광각 카메라, 차동차 앞면의 레이저 스캐너 등을 이용해서 완벽한 자동 주차를 구현한다고 한다.

기존의 주차 시스템이 완전 자동이 아닌 주차 보조였다면, valet 제품은 완전한 자동 주차를 실현했다는 것이다. 주차할 빈 공간을 찾는 것만 빼고 주차 전과정을 스스로 처리할 수 있다고.

주차가 부담스러운 많은 초보 운전자들은, 조만간 돈만 들이면 차량의 옵션으로 자동 주차 장치를 고를수 있겠지. 운전하다 주차할 위치를 발견하면 차를 세운 다음 내리고 스마트 폰의 차량 앱을 켜서는 '자동주차'를 눌러주면 된다.


운전자 입장에선 편하긴 하겠지만, 뒷차 입장에선 속 터질 상황일지도....

또 처음부터 이런 식으로 운전을 배운사람이라면 운전을 몇 년 이상 능숙하게 하게되어도 자동 주차 시스템이 없는 차량은 운전을 할 수 없게 되겠지....

http://articles.sae.org/13302/


Image: Valeo valet.jpg

An SUV fitted with Valeo's prototype fully automated valet parking system can be activated remotely via a smartphone. Valeo's near-term solution requires the driver to see the vehicle at all times and keep a finger on the smartphone's activation button during the entire parking process.


A Valeo-developed autonomous valet parking system enables an SUV to park itself as the driver watches from outside the vehicle.Standing a few feet from a driverless 2014 MY Range Rover Evoque, a Valeo engineer touches a smartphone screen to start the automated parking process.

“A 360-degree bird’s eye view of the vehicle is relayed back to the driver’s smartphone. The phone indicates what gear the vehicle is in and the vehicle’s speed, and the driver has the ability to press pause, resume, and cancel,” Sam Azuz, Project Technical Manager for Ultrasonic Systems R&D in Valeo’s Comfort and Driving Assistance Systems Business Group, told Automotive Engineering during a June demonstration outside Valeo North America’s headquarters in Troy, MI.

Valeo’s self-park system uses the Tier One supplier’s 12 ultrasonic sensors, its 360Vue system comprised of 4-megapixel digital cameras with image processing software, and a Valeo-produced laser scanner (developed in partnership with Ibeo Automotive Systems GmbH) mounted on the vehicle’s front lower grille. The patented laser scanner with built-in ECU has a 140-degree opening angle. “It sees quite wide, and it sees forward about 200 m (656 ft) to assist with the exploration mode of detecting objects and defining its path while driving itself,” said Azuz, an electrical engineer.

Also during the demonstration, a 2012 MY Volkswagen Eos concept showed Valeo’s near-term, autonomous parking solution. “With the Eos, the driver needs to keep a finger on the smartphone the entire time the vehicle is self-parking. If you find a parking spot that is too tight or you are just not comfortable parking, this system handles the tasks of steering, braking, accelerating, and shifting to park the vehicle, but not the task of finding the parking spot,” Azuz said.

Jean-Francois Tarabbia, Valeo group Senior Vice President, R&D and Product Marketing, said in an interview with Automotive Engineering that vehicles with autonomous parking capabilities typically prompt a different consumer response than fully self-driving vehicles.

“The acceptance is better because the car is driving in low-speed, so people do not really feel any threat of an accident. It appears safer, and it is completely safe,” said Tarabbia. He also noted that, for many consumers, parking is not a beloved undertaking. “The trend is, first the need is there. And, secondly, that the technology we are able to provide for that need is affordable,” Tarabbia said.

Valeo’s automated parking system makes its production debut in 2016 via a European market passenger car application in which the driver must keep a finger on the smartphone during the maneuver, according to Tarabbia.

“It’s a way to respect the current regulations: the driver still has control of the car. The purpose is to park the car where you can see it through the whole process. Europe has very small parking spots, so this is a very, very convenient feature for this kind of a situation,” Tarabbia said.

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