Author: Steve Allen |
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Audi has selected Thunderhill Raceway Park in northern California as a key U.S. test center for advanced piloted driving research.

Under the multi-year partnership, engineers from Audi and the Electronics Research Lab in Belmont, Calif., will use the track to study how self-driving vehicles perform at the limits of speed. In this way, the engineers will understand how to calibrate the vehicle software and advanced driver assistance systems to handle sudden and extreme conditions.

2015 Audi piloted driving experience - Sonoma © Volkswagen AG

2015 Audi piloted driving experience – Sonoma © Volkswagen AG

Audi has stated it plans to introduce highly automated driving technology – which it calls piloted driving – with the next-generation Audi A8 sedan in a few years. But steady research will continue as the capabilities of the technology rapidly improve, allowing the car to handle more of the driving functions.

2015 Audi piloted driving experience - Sonoma © Volkswagen AG

2015 Audi piloted driving experience – Sonoma © Volkswagen AG

Audi engineers, along with researchers deeply invested in self-driving technologies at Stanford University, have used the challenging courses at Thunderhill in the past. This new partnership provides even greater testing access. Audi experts will continue to develop piloted driving capabilities on surface streets and freeways to ready the initial deployment with the A8.

Piloted drive from Silicon Valley to Las Vegas for CES 2015 © Volkswagen AG

Piloted drive from Silicon Valley to Las Vegas for CES 2015 © Volkswagen AG

“Thunderhill provides a perfect setting to safely test the wide range of systems that will make highly automated driving a reality in the new future,” said Ewald Goessmann, Director, Electronics Research Lab.

“It is very exciting for our raceway to serve as a proving grounds for one of the most exciting automotive technologies on the horizon,” said David B. Vodden, President and CEO of Thunderhill Raceway Park.