Autopilot: Tesla takes next step in self-driving car race

Latest software update means handsfree driving closer to becoming a reality

Newer Tesla Motors cars will now be able to steer and park themselves under certain conditions, the carmaker said, although CEO Elon Musk cautioned that drivers should keep holding the steering wheel. Video: Reuters

As of Thursday morning, thousands of Tesla electric cars already sitting in garages and driveways were to abruptly gain the ability to drive themselves. Within limits, anyway.

Tesla Motors is finally rolling out its long-awaited Autopilot system, capable of steering cars at motorway speed, changing lanes and slamming on the brakes to avoid collision.

All Tesla Model S sedans made since September of 2014, as well as the company’s new Model X SUVs, come equipped with the camera, radar and ultrasonic sensors needed to make the system work. But Tesla has continued testing and refining the software until now.

The Autopilot software was to be installed via a wireless update between Wednesday evening and Thursday morning. Drivers must pay a one-time fee of $2,500 to use it.

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"This is going to be quite a profound experience for people when they do it," Tesla chief executive Elon Musk said. "It's going to change people's perception of the future, quite rapidly."

The system marks Tesla's first major foray into the race to develop self-driving cars. While Google has developed an autonomous prototype car that needs no input from its passengers, Tesla's Autopilot functions more like a highly evolved version of cruise control.

It can take over for a driver on the highway, steering through curves on its own, monitoring surrounding cars and adjusting speed as needed.

And while drivers don’t need to keep their hands on the wheel non-stop, Autopilot won’t let them completely tune out. Take your hands off for more than 10 seconds, and a soft chime will remind you to put them back on.

While Google may be aiming for cars that do all of the driving themselves, Tesla wants its drivers to pay attention.

“Over time, there will not be a need to have your hands on the wheel in the long term,” Mr Musk said. “But in the short term, we want people to exercise caution, because this is new.”

The system can work on major city arteries, at least those with clearly marked lanes, but it isn’t designed for neighbourhood streets. And the technology is still evolving. Rain, fog or snow can hamper the car’s ability to see the road and follow lanes.

But the cars using Autopilot will all share information with each other about the roads and streets they travel, adding details about the positioning and width of lanes. The system, Mr Musk said, will work better and better over time.

“The whole Tesla fleet operates as a network,’’ he said. “When one car learns something, they all learn it.”

New York Times