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Ponce
1st May 2010, 08:59 AM
NEW 'BLACK BOX' PLAN FOR US CARS



Politicians have vowed to address car safety after Toyota's massive recalls
Friday April 30,2010
New cars and lorries would be required to carry black boxes to record crash information and manufacturers would help fund the US government's motor industry safety agency, under a series of proposals following Toyota's massive recalls.

The House of Representatives' Energy and Commerce Committee released a draft that could form the basis of legislation to strengthen vehicle safety and the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration.

Politicians have vowed to address car safety after Toyota recalled more than eight million vehicles worldwide and paid a record £11 million US government fine for responding too slowly to a recall.

The draft legislation, released by Energy and Commerce chairman Henry Waxman, a Democrat, would eliminate the cap on civil penalties a car maker could face and allow NHTSA to order an immediate recall if it finds an "imminent hazard of death or serious injury".

It would also require new safety standards related to brake override systems, the prevention of pedals from getting trapped in floor mats and vehicle electronics.

Toyota has said it will install brake override systems in all future models and retroactively on some existing ones. The system automatically disengages the throttle if a driver presses on the brakes.

Some Toyota owners have filed lawsuits saying that Toyota's electronic throttle control systems are to blame for vehicles suddenly accelerating. The company has insisted electronics are not causing the problem.

The proposal would require a US motor industry executive to certify the accuracy of information submitted to NHTSA in response to a government investigation. Any executive who provided false information could face up to £163 million in fines.

Vehicles would be required to be equipped with event data recorders, commonly known as black boxes, to help authorities reconstruct the elements that led to a crash.

The plan also creates a "vehicle user fee" of £2 per vehicle, increasing to £6 in its third year, to fund NHTSA's vehicle safety programme. Safety groups have said the agency is underfunded and ill-equipped to investigate complicated safety problems.

Nomen luni
2nd May 2010, 06:28 AM
So that's what the big Toyota hoo-ha was for...

MNeagle
2nd May 2010, 06:47 AM
more control for parents:

U turns to technology to aid teen drivers and their parents

Sitting atop the dashboard, she speaks in the same melodic, robotic voice as a GPS.

But this device tattles.

"Reduce speed now," she says, her screen turning red. "Text message will be sent if speeding continues."

It's only a demonstration, but soon, technology developed at the University of Minnesota could keep an electronic eye on teen drivers.

If they speed? Mom and Dad get a text. Don't fasten their seat belts? Car won't shift into drive. Fill their car with friends? Parents find out within seconds.

The researchers believe that technology is one key to reining in rogue drivers and preventing the kinds of crashes that killed 11 people last weekend.

"We'd like to change teens' behavior before they become the next statistics," said Max Donath, director of the U's Intelligent Transportation Systems Institute.

Devices exist that monitor speed or seat belts or cell phone use, but the U's technology -- called the Teen Driver Support System -- goes well beyond that.

"It is the first holistic system to be built and tested by any university or private company," said Michael Manser, director of the institute's HumanFIRST Program.

This month, researchers will test-drive their latest model on parents and teens in Washington and Dakota counties, which have the state's biggest numbers of teen driver fatalities.

"We want to make sure it's usable," Manser said. For example: "How often do parents really want to get text messages?"

Based on that feedback, the U will tweak the technology and later recruit families to use it for a few months. They hope that eventually, the technology will come with the car -- or be offered as a low-cost add-on.

Smart phones and keys

The first prototype, developed in 2006 with some funding from the state and federal departments of transportation, was a complicated, clunky, computer-based device that had to be installed in a car.

Now, the sleek system is based, mainly, on a cell phone. Smart phones contain much of the technology needed: GPS, accelerometers, texting capabilities. Just add seat belt and passenger sensors and some intricate programming.

For example, a teen gets into the driver's seat and inserts her personal key. The system uses that key to recognize her, a newly licensed driver. If she's not allowed by law to have multiple passengers in her car, the system knows it and sends a warning her way.

"One unauthorized passenger," her cell phone says. She puts the car into drive anyway. The system sends a text, including a date, time and this: "Unauthorized passenger detected. Road: University Avenue near 14th St."

Texts are then gathered online and displayed in Google Maps, so the parent knows when and where problems occurred.

Parents still in driver's seat

The technology will never replace parents, and the U researchers aren't trying.

"We just make sure they get the text. The consequence is up to them -- as it should be," said Alec Gorjestani, a research fellow and the project's technical lead.

But it does give parents more information about how risky -- or how safe -- their teen is on the road.

"Most parents give their kid the keys and pray nothing happens," Manser said. "Now the parents can get a little insight into their teen's driving behaviors."

Jenna Ross • 612-673-7168

http://www.startribune.com/local/92593554.html

Ponce
2nd May 2010, 09:50 AM
I do have a recorder looking forward that takes a moving picture by producing or taking X pictures per seconds and in case of an accident it could well save my butt........unless.......of course........is my fault in which case "I forgot to turn it on"

1970 Silver Art
2nd May 2010, 05:24 PM
A black box for a car?..................

AWESOME!!!!!!!!!!

:sarc: :sarc: :sarc: :sarc: :sarc: :sarc: :sarc: :sarc: :sarc:

Ponce
2nd May 2010, 05:26 PM
Hey Mr. Art? wait till they make you carry a personal black box........hummmmmm it would probably be an in plant.

1970 Silver Art
2nd May 2010, 05:29 PM
Hey Mr. Art? wait till they make you carry a personal black box........hummmmmm it would probably be an in plant.


WOW!!!!!!

That would be so wonderful. Just so wonderful. I cannot wait to get my black box implant. :sarc: :sarc: :sarc: :sarc: :sarc: :sarc: :sarc:

RJB
2nd May 2010, 05:30 PM
Hey Mr. Art? wait till they make you carry a personal black box........hummmmmm it would probably be an in plant.
I'll tell them where they can implant it, and it won't be in me 8)

MNeagle
2nd May 2010, 05:43 PM
Aren't they called cell phones?

1970 Silver Art
2nd May 2010, 05:48 PM
Aren't they called cell phones?


Yep I think that my cell phone is in control of me because I have Google maps, email access and internet access on my cell phone.