Skip to main content

Driverless truck could improve workzone safety

A driverless truck, demonstrated this week by Pennsylvania vehicle manufacturer Royal Truck and Equipment, could help improve workzone safety, says the company. The truck, fitted with special rear-end crash attenuators and lights, was demonstrated using GPS waypoints and following a lead car, mimicking its path, braking and speed. The company has teamed up with Micro Systems to integrate military technology into truck mounted attenuators (TMA), which are used on many roads in the US to protect workers
August 27, 2015 Read time: 2 mins
A driverless truck, demonstrated this week by Pennsylvania vehicle manufacturer Royal Truck and Equipment, could help improve workzone safety, says the company.

The truck, fitted with special rear-end crash attenuators and lights, was demonstrated using GPS waypoints and following a lead car, mimicking its path, braking and speed.

The company has teamed up with Micro Systems to integrate military technology into truck mounted attenuators (TMA), which are used on many roads in the US to protect workers at road construction sites where there are no barricades.

The automated truck mounted attenuator (ATMA) truck is equipped with an electro-mechanical system and fully integrated sensor suite that will enable leader/follower capability that allows the ATMA to follow a lead vehicle completely unmanned.

Manned trucks fitted with impact attenuators, or crash cushions, on the rear of the vehicle, which absorb impacts and protect workers, have been credited with saving lives, but the drivers of the trucks are inevitably placed in harm’s way, “literally waiting to be struck,” said Robert Roy, president of Royal Truck & Equipment, maker of the autonomous trucks.

“Any time a driver can be removed from these vehicles in a very dangerous situation, and if the vehicle’s struck, there’s nobody inside of it to receive the damage or the injuries, that’s measuring success,” Roy said.

Two of the autonomous vehicles are set to make their debut at highway construction sites in Florida by the end of the year under a state department of transportation demonstration program.

Related Content

  • Automatic tyre pressure, temperature, condition data on the move
    February 8, 2016
    Under-inflated tyres are a widespread, global issue that impact road and driver safety. Indeed, across Europe alone, under-inflated tyres contribute to 9% of all fatal road accidents and 41% of serious injury road accidents, according to EU data. UK company WheelRight will be at Intertraffic Amsterdam with a proven automatic tyre condition management system that can address such issues. The company’s Drive-Through Tyre Management system automatically measures and records the pressure in a vehicle’s t
  • WheelRight displays proven tyre condition system
    April 5, 2016
    Under-inflated tyres are a widespread, global issue that impact road and driver safety. Indeed, across Europe alone, under-inflated tyres contribute to 9% of all fatal road accidents and 41% of serious injury road accidents, according to EU data.
  • Workzone safety requires timeliness and transparency, says Causeway One.network
    July 8, 2024
    Digitising the roadways will be key to publishing real-time data with navigation apps – and it is not a distant dream but an achievable reality, insists Kieran Holloway of Causeway One.network
  • Adaptive cruise control would suppress traffic instability
    March 20, 2014
    Professor Berthold Horn of Massachusetts Institute of Technology believes a modified adaptive cruise control could mitigate phantom traffic jamsthat occur for no apparent reason. The phenomenon of the phantom traffic jam is all too common: they appear for no apparent reason and, having caused frustrating delays for all travelers, evaporate for an equally mystical reason. Phantom traffic jams usually occur on busy highways and often take the form of repeatedly stopping and then accelerating up to near the