Skip to main content

Tampa CV pilot ‘underestimated’ challenges

Connected vehicle applications may be falsely marketed as 'deployment-ready', review warns
By Ben Spencer October 20, 2020 Read time: 3 mins
Tampa CV pilot learns hard lessons but ploughs ahead by collaborating with automakers (© Haiyin | Dreamstime.com)

A review of a connected vehicle (CV) pilot in Florida funded by the US Department of Transportation's ITS Joint Program Office has admitted testing and integration were “initially significantly underestimated”. 

The ITS Joint Program Office describes connected vehicle technology as “very complex” to implement and deploy, resulting in challenges in migrating the applications from the laboratory and vendor’s local field testing to the Tampa Hillsborough Expressway Authority (THEA) pilot area.

Moving a complex technology with many variables requires more testing in a deployed situation than in the laboratory, the office adds. 

For the pilot, THEA deployed 47 roadside units (RSUs) along with its reversible lane in Tampa's central business district. It also deployed more than 1,000 on-board units (OBUs) in personal vehicles, buses and streetcars. 

THEA then brought in multiple OBU vendors to demonstrate their hardware and software solutions. 

Most of the vendors demonstrated basic Vehicle to Vehicle applications such as forward collision warning, emergency electronic brake light and intersection movement assist while a few vendors demonstrated Vehicle to Infrastructure applications relevant to their products.

Vendors who demonstrated at their own facilities had more success, suggesting they were more controlled than those who tried to demonstrate at THEA in an unknown environment. 

Additionally, the lack of OBUs deployed and operating in a real-world environment was a considerable disadvantage to the vendors and the pilot. 

The office claims existing OBU applications were not as mature and ready to deploy as previously thought, meaning more effort had to be put into testing these applications. 

It is urging other developers to “take heed” that certain applications may be falsely marketed as 'deployment-ready', when in fact still require additional research and development to work effectively. 

For the next phase of the project, THEA is collaborating with Honda R&D Americas, Hyundai America Technical Center and Toyota Motor North America to deploy vehicles with connected vehicle technology already installed. 

THEA says OEM vehicles will interact with each other but also existing connected vehicle pilot participants. 

As part of the collaboration, Denso is to develop a common set of CV apps for the OEMs, enabling the rapid communication between vehicles and surrounding infrastructure. 

THEA claims CV pilot applications have proven that information from connected infrastructure can benefit drivers, automakers and road operators as a means to transmit crucial safety information.

Within the past 18 months, the authority insists the pilot has warned 14 wrong-way drivers on interchange ramps, nine potential trolley crashes and has given 1,500-speed advisories a month on freeway exit ramps.

Sue Bai, chief engineer, automobile technology research division at Honda, says: “The Tampa CV Pilot offers another great opportunity to collaborate with government entities and road operators to expand V2X deployment and help bring safety and mobility benefits to our customers and society sooner.”

John Robb, director, electronic systems development at Hyundai Motor, says: “Deployment of prototype onboard units by retrofitting them into participants’ vehicles in Tampa enables us to collect data and understand customers’ experiences of this V2X technology.”

The partners will highlight how OEM vehicles can interact with the pilot vehicles and RSUs at a demonstration likely to take place in the fourth quarter of 2021. 
 

Related Content

  • When weather warnings get hyperlocal
    August 24, 2016
    David Crawford looks at new technologies to cope with the age-old problem of driving in bad weather. On the 10-year average, between 2005 and 2014 bad weather contributed to more than 1.5 million vehicle crashes in the US each year, resulting in more than 800,000 injuries and 7,400 deaths. These were the findings of analysis by Booz Allen Hamilton of NHTSA data which concluded that the loss of life, hospital treatment and damage to assets costs an annual average of $42bn.
  • Launch of UK wind hydrogen refuelling station
    September 22, 2015
    Energy storage and clean fuel company ITM Power has launched its first public access hydrogen refuelling station at the Advanced Manufacturing Park, just off the M1, Junction 33 in South Yorkshire, funded by InnovateUK. The site, which as a public access refuelling station is the first of its kind in the UK, consists of a 225kW wind turbine coupled directly to an electrolyser, 220kg of hydrogen storage, a hydrogen dispensing unit and a 30kW fuel cell system capable of providing backup power generation fo
  • Connecting people and mobility
    February 3, 2012
    Stéphane Petti, Business Development Manager - Automotive, at Orange Business Services' International M2M Center, says that the ITS industry can no longer afford to ignore the telecommunications industry's role in connecting people and mobility services. To telephone companies (telcos), the Machine-to-Machine (M2M) sector is nothing new. Worldwide, they have been focusing considerable attention on M2M in all its sub-segments for several years now. It is the migration of M2M from fixed to wireless connectivi
  • Qualcomm helps accelerate China C-V2X trial
    July 10, 2021

    Vehicles and OBUs equipped with Qualcomm’s 9150 C-V2X chipset solution and Snapdragon Automobile 4G Platform were at the heart of China’s 2020 C-V2X Cross-Industry Large-Scale Pilot Plugfest.

    Qualcomm’s products help drive road safety technology such as V2V collision risk warnings and V2I speed limit alerts.

    During the trial, RSUs broadcast vital information such as ‘school ahead’ warnings or real-time notification of vulnerable road users crossing in front of vehicles.