Response
Lane Keeping Assist: Always on the right track
Lane Keeping Assist: Always on the right track
   Enlarge
Around one in six serious road accidents in Germany is caused by a vehicle leaving its lane. This is why Lane Keeping Assist was developed. The system detects the lane markings in front of the vehicle by evaluating the difference in contrast between the road surface and the lane markings.
Mercedes-Benz S-Class: The camera-based Lane Keeping Assist can recognise lane markings by evaluating the differences in contrast between the road surface and the boundary lines. If the vehicle leaves its lane unintentionally, brief vibrations of the steering wheel remind the driver to correct his steering  
   Enlarge
 
The line taken by the car and the driver’s activities are monitored at the same time. Only very specific movements indicate that the vehicle has left the detected lane unintentionally. Unlike conventional systems of this kind, the Mercedes system can reliably ascertain whether the car is leaving its lane intentionally or not. Only then does Lane Keeping Assist intervene: in cars by making the steering wheel vibrate to make the driver aware of the situation. There is therefore no warning if the driver e.g. accelerates before overtaking or joining a motorway, brakes heavily or enters a bend.
In trucks, the system works using audible warning signals which make the driver aware that the vehicle’s course needs to be corrected. As far as commercial vehicles are concerned, around half of all accidents caused by a vehicle changing lanes unintentionally can be prevented by using a Lane Departure Warning (LDW) system.
  The camera system on the inside of the windshield registers whether the bus is in danger of drifting off the road, in which case the Lane Assistant warns the driver.
 
   Enlarge
The Lane Assistant for buses shows just how intelligent and sophisticated Daimler’s safety systems are. Here, too, a camera in the windscreen monitors the vehicle to make sure it maintains the correct course in its lane. The main point of concern for the bus developers was coming up with a suitable form of warning for the driver. An audible warning of the kind used in trucks was out of the question as this would inevitably unsettle the passengers. The solution: two vibration motors integrated in the driver’s seat cushion, which make the driver aware of the situation when the vehicle crosses the detected lane markings unintentionally, also indicating on which side of the lane this has occurred. The system, which can be deactivated, is activated at speeds about 70 km/h, in other words on longer-distance routes. As soon as the driver indicates, the system is deactivated automatically.
The Lane Assistant Videocast
C2C_NOFLASHC2C_NOFLASH
Tools & Services
© 2012 Daimler AG. All Rights reserved.  |  Provider  |  Legal Notices and Terms  |  Cookies  |   Privacy Statement