Thats crowbar
Thats crowbar
I thought induction charging was super inefficient??? That would need to be perfected before it could be reasonable.Andres125sx wrote: ↑08 Jul 2018, 14:12
I think this is the future, 3.5 kW is pretty poor, but it will surely improve in a near future and nothing can be better than self charging with no interaction once you park your car. Perfect match for an AV.
Again, it revolves around having to get your car in a set position overnight.Zynerji wrote: ↑08 Jul 2018, 18:23I thought induction charging was super inefficient??? That would need to be perfected before it could be reasonable.Andres125sx wrote: ↑08 Jul 2018, 14:12
I think this is the future, 3.5 kW is pretty poor, but it will surely improve in a near future and nothing can be better than self charging with no interaction once you park your car. Perfect match for an AV.
Parking on a rubber mat in your garage might not be a bad idea for overnight charging, but since the air-gap between charger and inductor has a waste equivalence, trucks might cost twice as much to charge as lower cars..
If a car is autonomous then surely it can move it self when fully charged? Then the next vehicle moves inBig Tea wrote:Again, it revolves around having to get your car in a set position overnight.Zynerji wrote: ↑08 Jul 2018, 18:23I thought induction charging was super inefficient??? That would need to be perfected before it could be reasonable.Andres125sx wrote: ↑08 Jul 2018, 14:12
I think this is the future, 3.5 kW is pretty poor, but it will surely improve in a near future and nothing can be better than self charging with no interaction once you park your car. Perfect match for an AV.
Parking on a rubber mat in your garage might not be a bad idea for overnight charging, but since the air-gap between charger and inductor has a waste equivalence, trucks might cost twice as much to charge as lower cars..
If you do not have your own spot, you are excluded.
I do not know what the % of people who can not be sure of being able to park on their pad is, but they would not be in favour
Good point. I have fallen back into the old EV charging trapJonoNic wrote: ↑08 Jul 2018, 18:29If a car is autonomous then surely it can move it self when fully charged? Then the next vehicle moves inBig Tea wrote:Again, it revolves around having to get your car in a set position overnight.Zynerji wrote: ↑08 Jul 2018, 18:23
I thought induction charging was super inefficient??? That would need to be perfected before it could be reasonable.
Parking on a rubber mat in your garage might not be a bad idea for overnight charging, but since the air-gap between charger and inductor has a waste equivalence, trucks might cost twice as much to charge as lower cars..
If you do not have your own spot, you are excluded.
I do not know what the % of people who can not be sure of being able to park on their pad is, but they would not be in favour
A self adjusting pad wich moves up until the sensor reads X distance (min possible) is fairly simple and easyZynerji wrote: ↑08 Jul 2018, 18:23I thought induction charging was super inefficient??? That would need to be perfected before it could be reasonable.Andres125sx wrote: ↑08 Jul 2018, 14:12
I think this is the future, 3.5 kW is pretty poor, but it will surely improve in a near future and nothing can be better than self charging with no interaction once you park your car. Perfect match for an AV.
Parking on a rubber mat in your garage might not be a bad idea for overnight charging, but since the air-gap between charger and inductor has a waste equivalence, trucks might cost twice as much to charge as lower cars..
You get home, get out, the car goes around the corner to a charging center like a multistory carpark, but without having to have people access, and comes back to your door when its done.JonoNic wrote: ↑08 Jul 2018, 18:29If a car is autonomous then surely it can move it self when fully charged? Then the next vehicle moves inBig Tea wrote:Again, it revolves around having to get your car in a set position overnight.Zynerji wrote: ↑08 Jul 2018, 18:23
I thought induction charging was super inefficient??? That would need to be perfected before it could be reasonable.
Parking on a rubber mat in your garage might not be a bad idea for overnight charging, but since the air-gap between charger and inductor has a waste equivalence, trucks might cost twice as much to charge as lower cars..
If you do not have your own spot, you are excluded.
I do not know what the % of people who can not be sure of being able to park on their pad is, but they would not be in favour
Or, to return to a topic visited earlier, you just get the next car in the 'done' line.
Path prediction. A pedestrian who is stationary or walking can accelerate initially at about 1g (it's a bit less but not much) in ANY direction. Therefore, for a robust system, once you have identified a pedestrian its future path should be represented as an expanding circle. One disadvantage of that is that you have to know it is a pedestrian. So, in the unfortunate case of the lady who was Ubered to death, in 6 seconds she could have been anywhere in a circle roughly 60m in radius. As the car approached it would have been obvious that she hadn't started to accelerate, and so the circle would have got smaller, so 1 second from the collision it would be 5m radius.roon wrote: ↑05 Jul 2018, 23:51Are you talking about object recognition or "which object to hit first" in an avoidance scenario? Something else?Greg Locock wrote: ↑05 Jul 2018, 04:57My particular bugbear is path prediction, AFAIK they are using Kalman which is NOT conservative for pedestrians in particular.
Well put. Randomness presents path prediction development limits. Object recognition in this context is more important.Greg Locock wrote: ↑09 Jul 2018, 19:35Path prediction. A pedestrian who is stationary or walking can accelerate initially at about 1g (it's a bit less but not much) in ANY direction. Therefore, for a robust system, once you have identified a pedestrian its future path should be represented as an expanding circle. One disadvantage of that is that you have to know it is a pedestrian. So, in the unfortunate case of the lady who was Ubered to death, in 6 seconds she could have been anywhere in a circle roughly 60m in radius. As the car approached it would have been obvious that she hadn't started to accelerate, and so the circle would have got smaller, so 1 second from the collision it would be 5m radius.roon wrote: ↑05 Jul 2018, 23:51Are you talking about object recognition or "which object to hit first" in an avoidance scenario? Something else?Greg Locock wrote: ↑05 Jul 2018, 04:57My particular bugbear is path prediction, AFAIK they are using Kalman which is NOT conservative for pedestrians in particular.