Skip to main content

Driverless car completes 286km road trip in China report

The newspaper China Daily has reported that last month a driverless car, a Hongqi HQ3 with full intellectual property rights developed by the National University of Defense Technology, travelled on an expressway linking Changsha and Wuhan, the capitals of Hunan and Hubei provinces, under full computer and sensor control.
April 18, 2012 Read time: 2 mins
RSSThe newspaper China Daily has reported that last month a driverless car, a Hongqi HQ3 with full intellectual property rights developed by the National University of Defense Technology, travelled on an expressway linking Changsha and Wuhan, the capitals of Hunan and Hubei provinces, under full computer and sensor control.

"We only set a maximum speed and then left everything to the car itself," said Dai Bin, a professor in the research team told China Daily. "It knew the speed limits, traffic patterns, lane changes and roads using video cameras and radar sensors to detect other cars. It was all controlled by a command centre in the trunk."

The car encountered several complicated situations that made the test even more difficult. "We had fog and thundershowers as well as the complex route and unclear lane markings in some sections," said Dai Bin.

Interestingly, he said the car was not equipped with GPS, but relied solely on its sensors and lasers to detect the surrounding environment and choose the correct route. The test also showed the car could cope with potential dangers from other vehicles such as abrupt lane changes.

"The driverless car is much safer because it reacts more quickly than humans. It can respond in 40 milliseconds while human needs at least 500 ms," said Dai Bin.

During its trip, the driverless car is reported to have overtaken other cars 67 times and had an average speed of 87 kilometres an hour, according to the research team.

"Research on unmanned cars started late in China, but some technologies already meet international standards," said He Hangen, another professor on the research team.

Related Content

  • July 17, 2012
    Development of cooperative driving applications for work zones
    The German AKTIV project is researching several cooperative driving applications for use in work zones. PTV's Michael Ortgiese details progress. The steep increases in traffic volumes predicted back in the early 1990s have unfortunately been proven to be more than accurate. In Germany, the AKTIV project continues to look into cooperative technologies' potential to reduce the impact of those increased traffic volumes and keep traffic moving despite limitations in infrastructure capacity.
  • December 11, 2015
    Baidu autonomous car reaches milestone in Beijing
    An autonomous car developed by Chinese language Internet search provider Baidu has successfully completed rigorous, fully autonomous tests on one route with mixed roads under a variety of environmental conditions, says the company. The Baidu autonomous car is the first in China to have demonstrated full autonomy under mixed road conditions, marking a milestone in China's autonomous driving effort. The road tests were carried out under complex road conditions, and the Baidu vehicle, a modified BMW 3 Serie
  • March 2, 2016
    World Bank to support integrated transport project in China
    The World Bank’s Board of Executive Directors approved a loan of US$120 million to China to support the integrated transport development in the Wuhan Metropolitan Region. Located in Hubei Province in central China, the Wuhan Metropolitan Region is a city cluster formed by eight smaller cities within a 100-kilometre radius of the core city Wuhan and has been selected as a pilot in China’s search for a new urban development model attuned to the national goals of promoting equity and environmental sustainab
  • April 23, 2012
    Men are more stressed than women when stuck in traffic
    According to new research from TomTom, men's stress levels soar a staggering seven times higher than a woman's when stuck in heavy traffic. Psychologists tested volunteers for the rise in stress chemicals - Immunoglobulin A (IgA - an immune system marker) and alpha-amylase (a stress marker) - in their saliva when caught up in a traffic jam. The levels for women in the study increased by 8.7 per cent while stuck behind the wheel - but for men it shot up by a worrying 60 per cent in the same gridlock scenario