Bosch is flaunting its self-driving car prototype in Australia this week, and it might provide us a glance of Tesla‘s Autopilot 2.0 strategies.
Bosch, frequently understood as a German kitchen appliance designer, has launched the self-driving automobile for the ITS World Congress in Melbourne. It marks the very first time a self-driving car has driven on Australian roads.
Bosch has been dealing with an automobile automation system for five years that can be utilized on any automobile, Gavin Smith, President of Bosch Oceania, informed. For this presentation, Bosch used a Tesla Model S, however it stripped the car of its Auto-pilot hardware and replaced the sensing units with its own innovation.
It’s worth noting that Bosch is Tesla’s only recognized Autopilot provider.
As Tesla CEO Elon Musk tweeted in July, the German company develops the radar sensing unit for Tesla’s semi-autonomous system.
The Bosch prototype features 6 radars, 6 laser sensing units (lidar), one stereo video cam, and one high precision GPS.
Bosch states the prototype demonstrates level 4 autonomy, which suggests the vehicle is fully driverless in certain environments and conditions and does not need a motorist to take control of. However, Bosch does have a security driver behind the wheel. Tesla’s Auto-pilot system currently is capable of level 2 autonomy, implying that the car has automated functions, however still need to be monitored by the driver.