2018年3月7日(水)
High-end luxury cars have started to move
The beeps usually begin from about 6 feet away from an obstacle, and increase in frequency as you approach, becoming a continuous tone at about 6 inches from the obstacle. The Toyota Tundra was originally a mid-size pickup marketed to full-size buyers. Full-size trucks have also been expanding, becoming heavier, wider and taller.
The most obvious vehicle size increase has been in the pickup truck segment, where "small" trucks like the Dodge Dakota now look like giants beside their early predecessors. "Entry level" cars by companies like BMW are almost the same size nowadays as a mid-size car from a decade ago.
The downside of bigger vehicles is that parking is now brake pad
a lot harder than it was before. But how does it work?
Basically, a set of eyes are mounted in the vehicle's bumpers. This is very useful with parallel parking - you just have to let the car control the steering, gas and brake. When driving a new Toyota Tundra, you may notice it's difficult to tell where the truck begins and ends. As a solution to these new parking woes, vehicle designers have developed a new tool for drivers called "parking assist. When these sound waves come into contact with a solid object, they reflect back towards the sensor.
While the system is effective when dealing with stationary objects like parked vehicles, posts and garage doors, the sensors are not quite sensitive enough to pick up smaller objects moving past the sensors. Drivers must still do their best to ensure that there is no one behind or in front of their vehicle when parking.
High-end luxury cars have started to move on to the next generation of parking assist systems, which use a video camera and complex computer program alongside the sound sensor system. One of the consequences of vehicle sizes expanding is that parking now is harder than ever. This means that small children, animals, or all-terrain vehicles might not generate a warning beep - or at least not a consistent warning beep."
"Parking assist" is, on most vehicles, a system of sensors mounted on one or both sets of bumpers which beeps as the vehicle approaches an object.Vehicles of virtually every type and make have been steadily growing over the past ten years. So, while parking assist - aka parking sonar - is definitely a useful tool, it is not a replacement for caution. The parking assist is a great tool for parallel parking, and can also serve as a warning if a small object such as a fence post or child is near your vehicle. Beeping frequency and onset vary between different systems. Since the speed of sound is fairly constant through air, a computer uses the time it took for the reflection to be returned in order to calculate the distance between the bumper and the object. What interesting and amazing technology we have these days!
The result is more accurate input to the vehicle, which instead of merely warning drivers close to an object, will actually steer and park the vehicle for them. Toyota too has participated in this growth trend. This is exactly the same principle employed by submarines using active sonar underwater, except that water transmits the sound waves much better than air, allowing for better range. Toyota realized a larger vehicle could fit more customers, and as a result, the 2007 Tundra was much bigger than earlier models in almost every dimension. These "eyes", or special sensors, transmit highly focused sound waves at regular intervals from the bumper
The most obvious vehicle size increase has been in the pickup truck segment, where "small" trucks like the Dodge Dakota now look like giants beside their early predecessors. "Entry level" cars by companies like BMW are almost the same size nowadays as a mid-size car from a decade ago.
The downside of bigger vehicles is that parking is now brake pad

Basically, a set of eyes are mounted in the vehicle's bumpers. This is very useful with parallel parking - you just have to let the car control the steering, gas and brake. When driving a new Toyota Tundra, you may notice it's difficult to tell where the truck begins and ends. As a solution to these new parking woes, vehicle designers have developed a new tool for drivers called "parking assist. When these sound waves come into contact with a solid object, they reflect back towards the sensor.
While the system is effective when dealing with stationary objects like parked vehicles, posts and garage doors, the sensors are not quite sensitive enough to pick up smaller objects moving past the sensors. Drivers must still do their best to ensure that there is no one behind or in front of their vehicle when parking.
High-end luxury cars have started to move on to the next generation of parking assist systems, which use a video camera and complex computer program alongside the sound sensor system. One of the consequences of vehicle sizes expanding is that parking now is harder than ever. This means that small children, animals, or all-terrain vehicles might not generate a warning beep - or at least not a consistent warning beep."
"Parking assist" is, on most vehicles, a system of sensors mounted on one or both sets of bumpers which beeps as the vehicle approaches an object.Vehicles of virtually every type and make have been steadily growing over the past ten years. So, while parking assist - aka parking sonar - is definitely a useful tool, it is not a replacement for caution. The parking assist is a great tool for parallel parking, and can also serve as a warning if a small object such as a fence post or child is near your vehicle. Beeping frequency and onset vary between different systems. Since the speed of sound is fairly constant through air, a computer uses the time it took for the reflection to be returned in order to calculate the distance between the bumper and the object. What interesting and amazing technology we have these days!
The result is more accurate input to the vehicle, which instead of merely warning drivers close to an object, will actually steer and park the vehicle for them. Toyota too has participated in this growth trend. This is exactly the same principle employed by submarines using active sonar underwater, except that water transmits the sound waves much better than air, allowing for better range. Toyota realized a larger vehicle could fit more customers, and as a result, the 2007 Tundra was much bigger than earlier models in almost every dimension. These "eyes", or special sensors, transmit highly focused sound waves at regular intervals from the bumper
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