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Smart
Brake Light System Would Provide More Information To Drivers
Wednesday, March 26, 2008
Students
in Virginia Tech mechanical engineering Professor Mehdi
Ahmadian’s senior design class developed a horizontal
light bar to communicate slowing and stopping actions to a
driver in a following vehicle. It had several drawbacks,
including cost of production. A sensor circuit that will do
the same job using the extra lights usually mounted on
commercial vehicles has now been developed.
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Credit:
Virginia Polytechnic Institute
You are driving in heavy
traffic. The brake lights on the car in front of you come on. Is
the car slowing or is it going to stop? It slows to 25 mph and
the lights go off. You drop back. The car in front of you stops
suddenly! You stop just in time. The car behind you collects your
rear bumper.
“The problem is that
brake lights are yes and no – on and off,” according
to John Hennage of Montross, Va., a Ph.D. mechanical engineering
student in Virginia Tech’s College of Engineering
(http://www.eng.vt.edu/main/index.php). “The driver behind
does not know the speed at which the car in front is slowing or
stopping. The only other signal would be the smoke off the
tires.”
The solution is an intelligent
brake light system that communicates slowing and urgent stopping
– rather than simply that the brake pedal is being touched.
“A driver could be tapping his foot in time to music and
the brake lights would blink. Or, a driver can rest her foot on
the pedal and the lights would glow. It’s not enough
information for the following driver,” said Hennage.
With the support of Manassas,
Va., businessman Meade Gwinn, Hennage and Virginia Tech
Mechanical Engineering Professor Mehdi Ahmadian have invented an
intelligent brake light system, which they will show off at the
Mid-America Trucking Show at the Kentucky Fair and Exposition
Center in Louisville on March 27-29, 2008.
Gwinn came up with the idea for
communicating braking speed after being rear ended on Rt. 66 in
Northern Virginia. “It was part of a chain reaction
accident,” he said. Afterward, he walked down the line of
cars to make sure others were okay. “Two cars back was a
young woman with a child in the car. They were okay but she kept
saying, ‘I couldn’t tell how fast he was stopping.’
I thought, wouldn’t it be a good idea if rear tail lights
communicated better and the following driver knew how fast you
were stopping so they could take appropriate action?”
Years later, his youngest
daughter, a student at Virginia Tech, suggested Gwinn try and get
in touch with one of the engineering departments at the
university. In 2000, Gwinn wrote to the university president,
which led to a meeting with Walter O’Brien, professor and
then head of the mechanical engineering department. “He was
very helpful and encouraging, saying that this concept had the
potential of great application at a very low cost,” Gwinn
said. “He subsequently introduced me to Dr. Mehdi Ahmadian,
who was able to develop this project into a teaching/research
curriculum over the next several years.”
Ahmadian contacted Hennage to
help the group of students who were assigned the problem. “I
know electricity and had experience programming
microcontrollers,” said Hennage, who had previously
developed LED lights for commercial trucks, which Ahmadian knew.
The students developed a
horizontal light bar. Lights in the middle glow amber for
slowing. When stopping speed crosses a threshold to urgent, red
lights flash on either side of the amber lights. If deceleration
is rapid, all of the lights flash red.
“The draw backs are that
the light bar would be an additional brake light because the law
forbids altering original equipment,” said John Talerico, a
licensing associate with Virginia Tech Intellectual Properties
Inc. (VTIP). But the biggest obstacle is that the light bars cost
$50 each to produce.”
So in fall of 2007, Ahmadian
and Talerico approached Hennage about developing a cheaper unit
that does the same thing by tapping into existing lights. “It
would be for commercial trucks rather than private cars because
commercial vehicles typically have redundant lights,”
Hennage said. “Private cars are 10 to 15 years behind
commercial vehicles in terms of LED lighting.”
Hennage developed a gravity or
deceleration sensor control. Under normal braking – to slow
or to stop slowly – the tail lights work in the normal
fashion. But under heavy braking, extra lights flash.
“We also have the ability
to connect other sensors to the microcontroller, such as from the
automatic braking system, the automatic traction control, and the
collision avoidance system,” said Hennage. “If any of
these systems are activated, lights could flash to alert drivers
of nearby vehicles.”
“There are various ways
for this invention to work and we have a working prototype,”
said Talerico. “A manufacturer can take the specifications
and produce this circuit in mass quantities.”
Gwinn said, “Not only is
this concept approaching potential commercialization, which will
be most gratifying; but the educational benefit derived by
numerous mechanical engineering students over the years is very
heartwarming to me as well. I have met so many talented and
enthusiastic students to have made significant contributions to
the concept.
“The real reward to all
of us, however, is to know that if this venture works out,
millions of drivers will find the roads a much safer place to
drive,” Gwinn said. “In the end, we are all winners!”
Source:
Virginia Polytechnic Institute / Susan Trulove

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