• On TV.com: TOP 10 Shows CANCELED Too Soon
June 10, 2008 11:30 AM PDT

Self-driving Ford Hybrid SUV for sale, only $89k

by Stefanie Olsen
  • Font size
  • Print
  • 8 comments

Virginia Tech's team, VictorTango, won third prize and $500,000 in the Urban Grand Challenge in 2007. Torc Technologies, which collaborated on the car, will now sell a version of it to interested academics and researchers.

(Credit: Stefanie Olsen/CNET News.com)

Self-driving cars are veering closer to the roads.

Torc Technologies, which collaborated with Virginia Tech on an autonomous Ford Escape Hybrid that placed third in DARPA's Urban Grand Challenge, started selling a version of its self-driving creation Tuesday.

Called the ByWire XGV, Torc's drive-by-wire converted Ford Escape Hybrid will be available as a research platform for academics and car industry types who are interested in developing new applications in the field of autonomous autos.

While the world may not be ready yet for self-driving cars on the road, someone could have a lot of fun on a closed-course race track. Torc's car will sell for about $60,000, excluding the cost of the Ford Escape Hybrid with four-wheel drive. The starting sticker price on the SUV with 4WD is about $29,000. (As a platform, the car is ideal for U.S. research because it's American-made, has a powerful battery onboard, and is sturdy over rough terrain.)

"It's an experimental ground vehicle that provides researchers and developers with a car that's already converted," said Anu Saha, robotics product engineer with National Instruments, whose technology is used in the car. "There is a base level of technology, and researchers can come up with the next level, like what's stopping us from having autonomous cars on the road? We need more intelligence."

Torc is among the few contestants in DARPA's autonomous road races from 2004 to 2007 that are turning their hard work into a product. Team Dad commercialized an advanced laser sensor that it developed for the 2004 race, and then sold it to as many as 12 semifinalists in the 2007 event. The so-called lidar, which costs about $80,000, helps create a highly detailed map of the surrounding terrain so an autonomous car can more easily detect and avoid obstacles. Other teams have tried to sell their cars for research purposes, too, but on a more informal basis.

The auto industry is moving closer all the time to adopting these technologies. Infiniti has a new car that features "lane departure control," which is capable of keeping itself between lane lines. It will use the brakes to kick itself back on course if it veers from a lane, according to Car and Driver.

Torc announced other new autonomous vehicle technologies that it will sell to the military.

PackBot

The PackBot from iRobot can climb stairs and carry a camera on its arm. The robot is already being used in Iraq and Afghanistan.

(Credit: Courtesy of U.S. Army/Spc. Jonathan Montgomery)

The Blacksburg, Va.-based company has developed components that would convert a vehicle into one that could act autonomously. It developed hardware that contains the software algorithms for obstacle detection and avoidance, and route planning. The box is Joint Architecture for Unmanned Systems (JAUS) interoperable, meaning that it's compliant with a U.S. Department of Defense standard for syncing manned and unmanned systems. Also, Torc built the SafeStop, an emergency stop system for unmanned vehicles to get out of trouble. That's also in a hardware box that can be plugged into a vehicle.

So far, Torc has demonstrated how the technology works with the iRobot PackBot, an unmanned ground system used in Iraq for defusing explosive devices. Soldiers typically control the PackBot with a remote. But with Torc's system, called Autononav, they can use a monocular to mark a target for the robot to reach 100 meters away, for example; and the robot will drive itself there.

"The soldier doesn't have to worry about driving around ditches. It figures it out. We call that site and click autonomy," said Torc CEO Michael Fleming.

Fleming said that by mid-2009, a small number of the systems will be evaluated in Iraq. Although the system is newly available for purchase, he would not say how much it costs. It's sold only under military contract, he said.

But the technology can easily be ported to a variety of markets such as mining, industrial automation, and farming, Fleming said. Carnegie Mellon University's autonomous vehicle team has worked with Caterpillar on mining applications, for example.

"As an industry, we need to focus on taking these to commercial markets, such as mining automation, automated highways, farming," Saha said. "There's a cultural gap that needs to be filled, where users understand that in order to fill that void we need to continue to conduct experimentation."

advertisement
Click Here
Recent posts from News Blog
Nvidia puts NForce chipset development on hold
Opera 10 browser is here
Neil Young Archives Blu-ray: Rip off?
Acronis revises survey results about backup habits
Acronis miscalculates data on users' bad backup habits
Flickr co-founder presses beta button
Comcast, Sony open retail store
Cox to try coaxing the Internet into submission
Add a Comment (Log in or register) (8 Comments)
  • prev
  • 1
  • next
by TORC_Technologies June 10, 2008 1:12 PM PDT
Stefanie - thanks for the great write up. TORC is excited to offer the ByWire XGV. This commercially availalbe drive-by-wire Ford Escape Hybrid is based on our success working with Team VictorTango and Virginia Tech in the 2007 DARPA Urban Challenge on "Odin," the fully autonomous Ford Escape Hybrid.
Reply to this comment
by JCPayne June 10, 2008 2:36 PM PDT
I hope it isn't Microsoft powered....

Imagine someone is doing 75 down the highway....
Suddenly there's a huge car pile-up like 50 yards away.... Next thing the car's Microsoft message pops-up.

"ATTENTION DRIVER: Your breaks have failed to respond!
Your input is required: 1) Ignore, 2) Restart, 3) Abort, 4) Retry..."

"System has failed to respond!
1) Continue waiting, 2) Abort, 3) Ignore"

(Blue Screen)

"FAULT IN EXCEPTION FF00F00:F00F00F"
(Car continues on at same speed pending a restart.)
Reply to this comment
by DrtyDogg June 10, 2008 2:58 PM PDT
Go HOKIES!
Reply to this comment
by willdryden June 11, 2008 11:28 AM PDT
I believe the liability issues will prohibit the use of this technology on U. S. roads, but I see a lot of potential for military, space exploration, and construction in restricted areas. I can see the defendant now. "Judge, I was not driving. The car was driving itself so the auto manufacturer is at fault for the wreck." Of course it would do away with DUI/DWI cases.
Reply to this comment
by redwoman521 June 12, 2008 2:38 PM PDT
if all of the cars were self diriving though accident would be almost nill the vehicles would be able to communicate their location to others, merging and exiting, and turning would be completley self timed without a network failur or onboard failure there wouldnt be many chances for an accident
by Hawkskater June 11, 2008 6:55 PM PDT
I think i saw this story on a different website early this morning....
Reply to this comment
by Burnsie001 June 15, 2008 8:09 PM PDT
Of course it will do away with DUI/DWI cases. Why drive drunk when you have a chauffer? Why isn't MADD promoting this technology, it could end drunk driving for ever.

These vehicles will always obey the road rules, drive politely and safely. The machine won't get tired or distracted, or drink alcohol or take drugs. You won't need a parking space since the vehicle can drop you at work and then drive itself home. Old people who have lost their licence due to age will want one to retain their mobility.

Vehicle accident rates will plummet because the cars can be fixed with software updates whereas drivers can't. Since vehicle accident rates drop and these vehicles drive politely, there will need to less (and eventually none) traffic enforcement requirements, freeing police to perform other roles. Emergency wards will be relieved of pressure as accident rates drop freeing resources for other medical care.

The vehicle will always drive efficiently so fuel costs will be minimised. wear and tear will be minimised, services can be automatic, same as refilling the vehicle's fuel.

The old, drunk, and infirmed and just plain tired can now have full mobility without the risks of accidents. This has so many benefits that the public should be screaming for it. Personnaly I can't wait. Most people I talk to want one.

Best of all, if the car is driving though the suburbs and it hits a child running out into the street, you won't be blamed because you weren't driving. (Hey maybe they will finally find the parants responsible for neglect instead of blaming drivers).
Reply to this comment
by TORC_Technologies June 18, 2008 6:33 AM PDT
There are a few details TORC wants to clear up to avoid confusion -- the ByWire XGV is a drive-by-wire Ford Escape Hybrid, but not autonomous. TORC does have a product called the AutonoNav, which is an autonomous navigation system that can be added as an option, but is not part of the ByWire XGV base package.

The platform is ideal for universities and unmanned systems developers, allowing them to focus on higher level autonomy and perception challenges. They can focus on pushing autonomy further, and not waste valuable time and resources converting vehicles or worrying about details such as emergency stop controls. The ByWire XGV provides an ideal system for unmanned research and development programs.

The handheld "sight-and-click" operator control unit referred to with regards to controlling the iRobot PackBot is called the WaySight (not AutonoNav), and is a portable JAUS-interoperable OCU.

Visit http://www.torctech.com for full details on the ByWire XGV drive-by-wire Ford Escape Hybrid, SafeStop wireless emergency stop system, AutonoNav autonomous navigation system, WaySight handheld ?sight-and-click? OCU, and ByWire rapid drive-by-wire conversion.
Reply to this comment
(8 Comments)
  • prev
  • 1
  • next
advertisement

With eye to the future, try raw photos today

Raw photos are a hassle compared to JPEG. But if you like photography, the list of their image quality advantages is long and getting longer.

Inside the Apple, er, Microsoft Store

Although Redmond's foray into retail bears a big resemblance to Apple's approach, Microsoft has added some distinctive features to draw casual PC buyers and techies alike.

About News Blog

Recent posts on technology, trends, and more.

Add this feed to your online news reader

advertisement
advertisement

Inside CNET News

Scroll Left Scroll Right