Nissan is Putting Self-Driving Leafs to Work

Stephen Elmer
by Stephen Elmer

Nissan is putting its self-driving technology to work at its Oppama Plant with a pair of Leafs that are outfitted to tow other cars, all on their own.

The two specially modified Leafs are tasked with towing about 30 completed vehicles each day from the plant site to a shipping port, less than a mile away. Each Leaf makes five trips a day on average, pulling three cars at a time.

Each Leaf uses a combination of cameras, laser scanners and pre-loaded map data to safely travel the route with no extra infrastructure needed. Typical shuttle systems like this require either rails or magnetic tape to guide the trollies. This also means that the towing route can be altered on the fly thanks to the central traffic control system which monitors each car’s location, speed, battery life and operational status. If the two self-driving cars were to meet at an intersection it is this brain that will decide which one will go first.

SEE ALSO: Japan’s Awesome Nissan Skyline Police Car Spotted in the Wild

So far, more than 1,600 test runs have taken place at the plant, with Nissan considering spreading the technology to more of its plants around the world.

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Stephen Elmer
Stephen Elmer

Stephen covers all of the day-to-day events of the industry as the News Editor at AutoGuide, along with being the AG truck expert. His truck knowledge comes from working long days on the woodlot with pickups and driving straight trucks professionally. When not at his desk, Steve can be found playing his bass or riding his snowmobile or Sea-Doo. Find Stephen on <A title="@Selmer07 on Twitter" href="http://www.twitter.com/selmer07">Twitter</A> and <A title="Stephen on Google+" href="http://plus.google.com/117833131531784822251?rel=author">Google+</A>

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