High-tech cars like Audi's Sport Quattro Laserlight will be in the spotlight at the upcoming Consumer Electronics Show in Las Vegas. |
Audi will light the way for an increasingly high-tech auto industry
next week when it introduces its Sport Quattro Laserlight concept
vehicle at the annual Consumer Electronics Show in Las Vegas.
The
CES extravaganza has traditionally been the place where techies track
breakthroughs in TV, smartphone and computer technologies, but in recent
years, there’s been an increasing focus on the automobile – and no
wonder, considering some of today’s cars are likely to have more
microprocessing power than the most sophisticated homes.
Technology
is transforming virtually every aspect of the automobile, from engines
to headlights – and even the mundane windshield wiper. Some of the
year’s biggest breakthroughs will make their debut at CES and the 2014 North American International Auto Show, or NAIAS, that follows barely a week later in Detroit.
The
Audi Sport Quattro Laserlight offers a good example of just how broad
the automotive tech revolution has become. Its muscular yet windswept
body was developed entirely on a computer-aided design system that can
not only simulate high-speed airflow but even different crash scenarios.
Its drivetrain is a plug-in hybrid that even while producing a
jaw-dropping 700 horsepower is expected to yield as much as 94 miles per
gallon and 31-mile range on battery power alone.
And its headlights combine state-of-the-art LED low beams with even
more advanced laser high-beams that, Audi claims, yield “approximately
twice the lighting range and three times the luminosity of LED high beam
lights.” That translates into a light beam that can light up an
obstacle nearly a third of a mile ahead.
Ford will bring its prototype C-Max Solar Energi to the Consumer Electronics Show in Las Vegas next week. |
With
tough new mileage standards rapidly approaching in 2016, and even more
stringent rules set for 2025, some of the biggest technological
developments are taking place under the hood. Virtually every major
automaker now offers at least one conventional hybrid vehicle, and a
growing number are rolling out new plug-in and pure battery-electric
vehicles.
Ford will bring to CES its prototype C-Max Solar Energi,
a version of the plug-in “people-mover” now in dealer showrooms. In
this case, however, the maker says buyers would be able to ditch the
plug thanks to a new “concentrator” technology that could boost the
amount of energy harvested from the sun and used to recharge the show
car’s batteries.
At the Detroit auto show, meanwhile, Toyota will
stage the North American debut of its new fuel-cell vehicle prototype. A
production version of the hydrogen-powered vehicle is scheduled to go
on sale in 2015 – though Hyundai plans to beat the Japanese giant to
market with a fuel cell version of its Tucson crossover set for launch
this spring.
Kia will bring its new GT4 Stinger concept sports car to Detroit's North American International Auto Show. |
Even the conventional gasoline engine is undergoing a transformation
thanks to new and improved technologies like direct injection and
advanced turbocharging. Kia will bring to Detroit its GT4 Stinger,
a concept sports car whose tiny 2.0-liter engine will produce as much
horsepower as a V-8 twice its size – while sipping far less fuel.
Expect
to see plenty of new safety technology debut this year, much of it the
precursor to the autonomous vehicles makers like Nissan, Ford and
General Motors are promising to put into production by the beginning of
the next decade. Forward collision warning systems will be on a record
number of vehicles on display in Detroit – more and more capable of
stopping a vehicle entirely in a traffic jam, or if a potential
collision is spotted.
The new 2015 Hyundai Genesis will add a
novel system designed to detect when there’s a build-up of carbon
dioxide in the cabin, which might cause a motorist to get drowsy. The
system will automatically vent the cabin if CO2 levels get above 2,500
parts per million.
There’ll also be plenty of new technology at a
motorist’s fingertips. Manufacturers are promising to reveal an
assortment of updated infotainment systems at both the CES and NAIAS.
Expect to see more vehicles – including a wide range of new Chevrolet
models -- offered with in-car 4G hotspots that can increase data access,
a great way to keep kids occupied on long trips or to yield faster
access to e-mail, music and other online services. Among other things,
makers plan to provide access to an increasing number of smartphone
apps, such as the Pandora and Stitcher music services.
Even the most mundane features of a car are being touched by this
high-tech revolution. Ford’s C-Max introduced a system that can detect a
motorist’s foot waggling under the rear bumper and pop open the hatch.
With the new Hyundai Genesis, you’ll only stand near the trunk with keys
in pocket for a few seconds for it to open up.
Meanwhile, Mercedes and several other makers are taking the
windshield wiper high-tech to improve their ability to keep the glass
clear. In fact, the wiper might soon disappear entirely. Britain’s
McLaren hopes to adopt a system developed for military jets that use
sonic waves to clear the windshield. And Italian design house
Pininfarina has a concept car dubbed Hidra that uses a special,
multi-layer coating that repels both water and dirt, which it says could
be in production within a few years.
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