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Self Driving Big Rig Completes 950 mile Trip 10 Hours Faster than a Human Driver
Posted on 6/4/21 at 9:40 am
Posted on 6/4/21 at 9:40 am
quote:
A Self-Driving Truck Got a Shipment Cross-Country 10 Hours Faster Than a Human Driver
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Self-driving cars are taking longer to come to market than many expected. In fact, it’s looking like they may be outpaced by pilotless planes and driverless trucks. A truck isn’t much different than a car, but self-driving technology is already coming in handy on long-haul trucking routes, as a recent cross-country trip showed.
Last month TuSimple, a transportation company focused on self-driving technology for heavy-duty trucks, shipped a truckload of watermelons from Arizona to Oklahoma using the truck’s autonomous system for over 80 percent of the journey. The starting point was Nogales, at Arizona’s southern end right on the border with Mexico. A human driver took the wheel for the first 60 miles or so, from Nogales to Tucson—but from there the truck went on auto-pilot, and not just for a little while. It drove itself all the way to Dallas, 950 miles to the east (there was a human safety driver on board the whole time, but not controlling the truck).
If you look at the most direct route, it’s pretty straightforward: there’s one fork where I-10 splits off and merges with I-20, but other than that, it’s straight on through ‘til morning. Literally, in this case; the truck drove the route in 14 hours and 6 minutes, as compared to the given estimate of the average time it takes a human to drive the same route—24 hours and 6 minutes.
That’s a 42 percent savings on time. But the 24-hour estimate is pretty conservative, if you ask me, depending how fast you’re going and how much coffee you’re drinking. Not too long ago I drove 960 miles—almost the exact same distance—in 14 hours and 20 minutes. Did it take my body days to stop aching afterwards? Yes. Did I get a $120 speeding ticket in Iowa? Yes. Was it worth? Sort of/not really. But you get my point.
Trucks are slower than cars, admittedly. And perhaps most importantly, there’s actually a law that limits truck drivers from being on the road for longer than 14 consecutive hours; within that span of time they can be driving for 11 hours, and they have to have been off-duty for at least 10 hours prior. It’s pretty self-explanatory, but the rule exists to keep overtired drivers off the road and prevent accidents. So even if a driver is willing and able to drive for, say, 16 hours straight (with bathroom and fuel breaks, and an abundant supply of easy-to-eat-with-one-hand meals and snacks), they’re technically not allowed to do so.
From Dallas, the human driver took over again and drove the final 200 miles to a distribution center in Oklahoma City. From there, the watermelons were inspected—nothing to see here, they were in better shape than they would’ve been with a human driving the whole time—then distributed to stores all over the state.
The reason the watermelons were in better shape was because they were a day fresher. This is one angle TuSimple is hoping will boost its business. “We believe the food industry is one of many that will greatly benefit from the use of TuSimple’s autonomous trucking technology,” said Jim Mullen, the company’s chief administrative officer. “Given the fact that autonomous trucks can operate nearly continuously without taking a break means fresh produce can be moved from origin to destination faster, resulting in fresher food and less waste.”
The watermelon delivery trial was done as part of a partnership with Giumarra, a network of produce growers and distributors, and Associated Wholesale Grocers, the biggest cooperative food wholesaler for independently-owned supermarkets in the US.
Last summer, TuSimple announced plans to build a nationwide network of self-driving trucks, complete with digitally-mapped routes, terminals, and a central operations system. They already operate seven routes between Phoenix, Tucson, El Paso, and Dallas, and are in the process of adding routes to Houston and San Antonio.
In theory, a self-driving truck can extend the hours a driver can operate a vehicle safely by only requiring that he or she take over in congested areas, construction zones, and the first and last mile of the shipment.
This has potential to make truck drivers more productive and reduce burnout. This also means that fresh items, such as oranges from Florida or shrimp from Louisiana, can reach places like Chicago or Detroit in a more fresh state.
Posted on 6/4/21 at 9:43 am to goofball
quote:
In theory, a self-driving truck can extend the hours a driver can operate a vehicle safely by only requiring that he or she take over in congested areas, construction zones
So self driving trucks couldnt be used anywhere on i10 or i12 in LA
Posted on 6/4/21 at 9:44 am to goofball
If they would just get rid of the driving hour restrictions and drug test, truck drivers could easily surpass this...
Posted on 6/4/21 at 9:45 am to goofball
I wonder if we could take one really badass truck, and then have that one tow a couple of other trucks.. or actually, if you only had to tow the trailer portion, it could probably pull a bunch of them...
Would probably need a dedicated lane with road crossings and such for all those daisy-chained semitrailers
Would probably need a dedicated lane with road crossings and such for all those daisy-chained semitrailers
This post was edited on 6/4/21 at 9:46 am
Posted on 6/4/21 at 9:45 am to goofball
Waiting for the first wreck to be caused by one of these things getting hacked.
Posted on 6/4/21 at 9:45 am to goofball
Would love this simply because the robot trucks would stay out of the left fricking lane!!!
Posted on 6/4/21 at 9:46 am to goofball
All without trucker meth...
Posted on 6/4/21 at 9:47 am to goofball
After you read about self-driving technology a bit you begin to realize we're really far off and may never get to full time automation. Unless it's a detailed geofenced area on well constructed roads with little change in weather patterns, it's going to be really difficult to see a time where a driver isn't necessary at some points.
This post was edited on 6/4/21 at 9:48 am
Posted on 6/4/21 at 9:49 am to goofball
quote:
In theory, a self-driving truck can extend the hours a driver can operate a vehicle safely by only requiring that he or she take over in congested areas, construction zones, and the first and last mile of the shipment.
This is why truckers often work in 2 man teams. So the rig can be on the road 24 hours a day
Posted on 6/4/21 at 9:49 am to MorbidTheClown
I assume this is mainly due to the lack of sleep needed by an automated truck?
Posted on 6/4/21 at 9:49 am to goofball
It's basically what airliners have been doing for decades.
Posted on 6/4/21 at 9:49 am to Cosmo
quote:
So self driving trucks couldnt be used anywhere on i10 or i12 in LA
I think they'd make I-10 or I-12 much safer in the 20 minutes per day that they aren't completely congested.
Posted on 6/4/21 at 9:49 am to 0x15E
quote:
Waiting for the first wreck to be caused by one of these things getting hacked.
Meanwhile 50 people will die today from man operated trucking accidents...
Posted on 6/4/21 at 9:50 am to CocomoLSU
quote:
I assume this is mainly due to the lack of sleep needed by an automated truck?
Correct, although it will still need a splash of diesel and a squirt of oil every now and then. At least until that's outlawed.
Posted on 6/4/21 at 9:51 am to goofball
quote:I'm curious if the safety driver has to stay awake/alert the entire time in case there was an emergency or a need to take over.
In theory, a self-driving truck can extend the hours a driver can operate a vehicle safely by only requiring that he or she take over in congested areas, construction zones, and the first and last mile of the shipment.
If so, you are going to need multiple safety drivers because I wouldn't want a safety driver/last mile driver who has had to stay awake 24+ hours monitoring the computer driver.
Posted on 6/4/21 at 9:55 am to CocomoLSU
quote:
I assume this is mainly due to the lack of sleep needed by an automated truck?
And the hour restrictions they are required to abide by
Posted on 6/4/21 at 9:56 am to PJinAtl
Can it go from Tucson to Tucamcari?
Tehachapi to Tonopah?
Cuz if you give me weed, whites and wine
And you show me a sign
I’ll still be willin
To be movin
Willin by Little Feat
Tehachapi to Tonopah?
Cuz if you give me weed, whites and wine
And you show me a sign
I’ll still be willin
To be movin
Willin by Little Feat
Posted on 6/4/21 at 9:58 am to OKtiger
quote:
Would love this simply because the robot trucks would stay out of the left fricking lane!!!
How else are they going to get up to 70.25mph so they can pass the trucks doing 70mph?
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