Nissan announces piloted drive on new Qashqai by 2017

Nissan

The Nissan Qashqai crossover will be the company’s first vehicle in Europe to feature autonomous ‘Piloted Drive’ technology when it rolls off the line next year. This was announced by Nissan’s Chairman Paul Willcox at the Geneva Motor Show.

Produced at Nissan’s manufacturing plant in Sunderland, UK, the updated Qashqai will be equipped with ‘Piloted Drive 1.0’, a feature that allows cars to drive autonomously and safely in a single lane in heavy traffic conditions on highways. Thousands of hours of testing and multiple sensors on the car ensure that the system anticipates its surroundings correctly.

Autonomous accessibility

The announcement marks an important step in the brand’s commitment to making autonomous drive technologies accessible to all. Furthermore, it paves the way for Nissan’s Intelligent Mobility vision, a 360-degree approach to a smart automotive future.  Nissan has already set out its commitment to launch a range of vehicles with autonomous drive capabilities by 2020, including vehicles that will be able to safely navigate city intersections.

During the next four years, Nissan will launch vehicles with increased autonomous capabilities, like “multiple-lane control,” which can autonomously negotiate hazards and change lanes during highway driving. And, by the end of the decade, Nissan will introduce “inner-city” autonomy, enabling vehicles to negotiate city cross-roads and intersections without driver intervention.

The technology will be installed on mainstream, mass-market cars at affordable prices, with Piloted Drive 1.0 coming to Japan in 2016. An on-road demo event in Europe in 2016 will showcase the maturity of Nissan’s autonomous drive technology.

Technology

Making the announcement at the Geneva Motor Show, Paul Willcox, Chairman of Nissan Europe, said: “The Nissan Qashqai has always been a trailblazer in the market so it’s fitting that customers will get to experience the future of mobility in our award-winning crossover as early as 2017.”

“It’s a car people love and trust, and now it will spearhead Nissan’s move towards launching a range of vehicles with autonomous drive capabilities from 2017. We try to take technology normally found in premium cars and make it accessible to millions of motorists.”

Evolution in automated driving

“The introduction of Piloted Drive technologies will be an evolution, not a revolution, as the building blocks for this are already in place in many of our cars today through our Safety Shield Technology,” added Willcox. “With the driver in control, we want to remove the pain-points of being behind the wheel, like navigating heavy traffic, to put the excitement back into driving.”

Author: Lars Verpalen

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