Mazda to Begin Public Road
Trials of the Mazda ASV-4 Advanced Safety Vehicle Category:
Technology
22 FEBRUARY 2008
HIROSHIMA, Japan — Mazda Motor Corporation will commence public
road trials of its advanced safety vehicle, Mazda ASV-4, in the
Hiroshima area on March 11, 2008. The trials are based on the
Advanced Safety Vehicle (ASV) Promotion Plan that was
introduced by Japan’s Ministry of Land, Infrastructure, and
Transportation (MLIT) to promote the development, practical
application and wider use of ASV technologies aimed at reducing
the number of traffic accidents. During the ASV Project’s Phase
Four trials, Mazda will forge ahead with development of a safe
driving support system that employs vehicle-to-vehicle
communications.
In collaboration with other ASV project
members in the Hiroshima area*1, Mazda will collect and analyze
data to promote development of a safe driving support system.
The system deploys safety technologies which utilize
vehicle-to-vehicle communications to alert drivers of oncoming
vehicles at blind intersections or on twisting roads with
limited visibility. By reducing driver oversight or error, the
system aims to mitigate two vehicle collisions at blind
intersections, rear-end collisions and accidents when a vehicle
performs right turns. Mazda plans to begin testing the two
vehicle blind collision avoidance system in fiscal year 2007.
Road trials of the right-turn and rear-end collision avoidance
systems are set to commence in fiscal 2008.
The ASV project has been promoting the
spread of safe driving to reduce traffic accidents through
advanced technologies for over fifteen years since its
inception by the MLIT in 1991. Mazda’s test results from Phase
One to Phase Three have already resulted in the successful
development of various advanced safety technologies. These
include: a rear vehicle monitoring system that detects vehicles
approaching from behind at highway speeds; and Mazda’s Precrash
Safety System, which uses milliwave radar to monitor for
oncoming obstacles, then alerts the driver and automatically
applies the brakes if necessary. The Mazda ASV-4, part of the
project’s fourth phase (2006 to 2010), will participate in the
effort to promote the spread of ASV technologies and develop
and implement a telecommunications-based safe driving support
system to help reduce traffic accidents.
In January 2008, Mazda began trials to
validate a new Intelligent Transport System (ITS)*2 as part of
a consortium of local government, academia and industry in the
Hiroshima area. The ITS consists of safe driving support
technologies that link sensors installed along roadways to
vehicles (road-to-vehicle communications) in order to detect
potentially dangerous situations that the driver cannot see. By
conducting the ASV public road trials in the same area as the
ITS experiments, Mazda intends to evaluate the compatibility of
the road-to-vehicle and vehicle-to-vehicle communication
systems.
Mazda is dedicated to leveraging these
road trial results, and its own research and development
initiatives, to establish ITS and ASV technologies that can
assist in reducing the number of traffic accidents and decrease
the environmental burden caused by road traffic. Going forward,
Mazda will continue to develop and evolve safety technologies
that are helping to promote a sustainable transport environment
for the future.
*1 Mitsubishi Motors Japan and Kawasaki
Heavy Industries, Ltd.
*2 A new traffic system that uses advanced telecommunications
technology to create an information network between people,
vehicles and the road infrastructure in order to solve
transportation problems such as road accidents, traffic jams
and damage to the environment.
Return to Mazda articles
|