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posted by on Wednesday April 19 2017, @04:21AM   Printer-friendly
from the someone-has-to-be-first dept.

Einride, a company based in Gothenburg (Göteborg), Sweden, has a vision that lowers these hurdles slowing the adoption of both alternative energy and self-driving technologies in hauling. The key change? Take the driver out of the vehicle with a hybrid of self-driving and remote control.

Einride plans to have their driverless (windowless, even) T-pods plying the route between Gothenburg and Helsingborg by 2020. The 7-meter (23- feet) long vehicle can carry 15 standard pallets and up to 20 tons. The trucks roll through their highway distances in fully automated mode. But when they near population centers, the T-pods can be put under remote control, with a human managing the navigation.

With no paid personnel on board to be bored and useless during long charging cycles, electric motors begin to make more sense. The T-pods can travel 200 km (124 miles) on a single charge, and stops at charging stations add little to the overall costs of haulage compared to traditional rigs that have down-time during driver resting periods. Remote drivers can simply switch their attention to a different vehicle when one T-pod stops for recharging. Which is a good thing, because even the run up and down the Swedish coastline between Gothenburg and Helsingborg may be a bit out of range without a top-up along the way.

Maybe all those hours playing Starcraft did not go to waste after all--perfect training to be an Einride operator.


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  • (Score: 2) by PiMuNu on Wednesday April 19 2017, @11:49AM

    by PiMuNu (3823) on Wednesday April 19 2017, @11:49AM (#496249)

    > Finally, a point that makes sense. As self-driving vehicles become more common, things like this are going to require some serious consideration.
    > Probably a lot of standardization, or even special signaling for automated vehicles.

    I assumed for many years that someone had already thought of plugging wifi/RF/cheese transmission into all the signposts to deal with automated vehicles. It would be insane to require automated vehicles to process visual info for this stuff when there are so many more elegant solutions.

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