There are about 20,000 collisions with kangaroos in Australia each year according to insurance industry data. But Volvo is working on a system that uses radar and camera technology to detect rogue roos -- and automatically slam on the brakes if the driver does not.
Itās an advancement of technology originally developed to detect pedestrians; later this year the same set-up will enable selected Volvo cars to also detect cyclists.
āIt will be a challenge to detect kangaroos because they are not as predictable as livestock and other large animals,ā Martin Magnusson, a leading Volvo safety engineer, told News Limited at a safety conference overnight. āBut we think we can come up with a way to detect them.ā
Volvo is in the early stages of development but āanimal-detectionā technology should be on the road within three years. āWe are starting with the large animals first, the ones that pose the greatest risk to drivers, such as a moose, a horse, or a cow, then we are working on ways to detect other animals, including kangaroos,ā Magnusson said.
Unfortunately manās best friends -- dogs and cats -- are not on the list of those to save. āDriver safety is not an issue when it comes to a collision with those animals. Of course itās a pity, and I happen to like cats, but there are no plans to [detect dogs or cats],ā Magnusson said.
Volvo says it will do most of the development work on kangaroos by using computer simulations. It will then create a kangaroo crash test dummy similar to the one used by Holden for decades.
In the final stages of development Volvo says it will test its hi-tech system on kangaroos in Australia. āEventually, we will have to test it in an environment with real kangaroos,ā Magnusson said. The system will not swerve the car to avoid a kangaroo (which safety experts strongly advise against in any case) it will instead apply the brakes at full force to reduce the impact speed from, say, 110km/h to 70km/h.
A radar sensor in the grille scans the road 100 metres ahead to detect cars, cyclists and pedestrians. A camera in the windscreen works in parallel with the radar to detect which way the object is moving and help the computer decide what action to take, if any. The system processes 15 images every second and can react to an emergency in half the time of a human, Volvo claims.
Magnusson says it takes 1.2 seconds for an attentive driver to detect danger and then apply the brakes, compared to about 0.5 second for the computer system. āThis truly is state of the art technology, because the brakes can be primed in milliseconds, much faster than a human,ā Magnusson said. āAnd we are only at the beginning of what is possible.ā Volvo says it is not designed to take responsibility away from drivers. āIt is a back-up in case they are distracted,ā Magnusson said.
The Volvo system will join a long line of gadgets designed to avoid crashes with kangaroos. Australian inventions mounted to the front of cars include plastic āwhistlesā and electronic sound transmitters that apparently only kangaroos can hear. However, a 2006 study by the CSIRO found electronic sound emitters were not effective at deterring kangaroos. It tested one such device by switching it on in a paddock full of kangaroos and they didnāt budge.
This reporter is on Twitter: @JoshuaDowling