Mercedes-Benz  Research & Development North America, Inc. (MBRDNA) is supporting  the U.S. Department of Transportation (USDOT) Vehicle-to-Vehicle (V2V)  Model Deployment. This activity, to be officially launched on August 21,  2012 in Ann Arbor, Michigan, is the largest connected vehicle field  operational trial in the world, with over 2800 passenger, commercial,  and transit vehicles. The purpose of this trial is to evaluate, in real  world scenarios, automotive safety technology based on wireless  communications between vehicles. Academia, industry, and government have  all come together to assure the success of this effort.
    The wireless communications technology used in  the V2V Model Deployment is 5.9 GHz Dedicated Short Range Communications  (DSRC). Mercedes-Benz, a pioneer in automotive safety, considers  innovations based on 5.9 GHz DSRC, in combination with in-vehicle  Advanced Driver Assistance Systems, as an important step on the road  towards accident free driving. For this reason, Mercedes-Benz continues  to collaborate with government agencies and other major car  manufacturers in the United States and Europe to develop effective  safety solutions based on 5.9 GHz DSRC.
    MBRDNA equipped eight Mercedes-Benz C-300  passenger vehicles and three Freightliner heavy-duty commercial trucks  with fully integrated 5.9 GHz DSRC systems to support the V2V Model  Deployment. The passenger vehicles feature LED strip lighting on the  dashboard that illuminate to warn the driver of an impending collision  risk. The commercial vehicles display warnings through tablet devices  installed in the cockpit. Local Ann Arbor residents will drive these  vehicles over the course of one year, while researchers collect and  analyze data to assess the systems’ effectiveness.
  In addition to its participation in USDOT V2V  Model Deployment, Mercedes-Benz's strong support for V2V communication  is also evident in other projects in this area, for instance the simTD  research project. (The name simTD stands for ‘Safe Intelligent Mobility –  test field Germany’.) Headed by Mercedes-Benz, the aim of the recently  started simTD field trial is to test the V2V systems’ suitability for  everyday use in real-life traffic conditions on the roads of the  Rhine-Main region.
  *Courtesy of Daimler Media
      
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