Self-steering Volvo Truck set to Increase Brazil's Sugar-cane Harvest
Self-steering Volvo Truck set to Increase Brazil's Sugar-cane Harvest
PR68836
GOTHENBURG, Sweden, June 8, 2017 /PRNewswire=KYODO JBN/ --
- With Photo
Volvo Trucks has developed a new self-steering truck that can become a
significant productivity booster for Brazilian sugar-cane growers. The truck,
which is used to transport newly harvested sugar-cane, is steered with great
precision through the fields in order to avoid damaging the young plants that
will form the following year's crop. At present, about four per cent of the
crop is lost as young plants are run over and the soil is compacted by moving
vehicles. This can translate into tens of thousands of US dollars in lost
revenue per truck per season.
To view the Multimedia News Release, please click:
https://www.multivu.com/players/uk/8117251-self-steering-volvo-truck-brazil-harvest
In Maringa, an hour's flight west of Sao Paulo, the Usina Santa Terezinha
Group produces sugar and ethanol from its own sugar-cane crops. In the past
growing season, the company's huge fields have served as a test area for a
prototype vehicle from Volvo Trucks. The truck was developed to examine how
automated driving can make it possible to avoid damage to soil and crops, thus
boosting revenues. The potential for bigger harvests is significant - up to ten
tonnes per hectare per year.
"With the help of Volvo Trucks' solution we can increase productivity, not
just for one single crop but for the entire lifecycle of the sugar-cane plant,
which lasts five to six years," explains Santa Terezinha's Finance and
Procurement Director, Paulo Meneguetti.
At present, sugar-cane is brought in from the fields using harvesters and
manually controlled trucks, which drive alongside each other at a low speed.
When a truck is fully loaded and drives off to empty its load, the next one
moves up next to the harvester and the procedure is repeated. The big challenge
for the truck driver is to match the speed of the harvester and at the same
time concentrate fully on driving in its tracks, so as not to trample the
nearby plants that will become the following year's crop.
Volvo Trucks has solved the problem with a driver assistance system that
automates steering. It ensures that the truck always maintains exactly the
right course when it drives to, alongside and away from the harvester, so that
the plants are not damaged by trampling. With the help of GPS receivers, the
truck follows a coordinate-based map across the sugar-cane field. Two
gyroscopes ensure that not only the front wheels but the entire vehicle is
steered with great precision, to prevent the truck from veering more than 25 mm
laterally from its set course. When loading, the driver can choose to regulate
speed with
the help of the vehicle's cruise control, or to accelerate and brake manually.
Since the driver is released from the burden of the concentration-demanding and
tiring high precision steering process, it is easier to remain focused and work
in a more relaxed and safe way throughout the shift.
"With this solution we will soon be able to significantly increase the
productivity of our customers in the sugar-cane industry. At the same time, we
will improve their drivers' working conditions and safety. This in turn will
make the job more appealing, and make it easier to recruit and maintain
drivers," says Wilson Lirmann, President of Volvo Group Latin America.
This summer the research project will transition into the product
development phase, with more vehicles being field-tested. After that, the
solution can be expected to become commercially available in the foreseeable
future. Already this year Volvo Trucks Brazil will offer its VM customers in
the sugar cane industry an advanced GPS-based map-reading system that gives the
driver far better scope for maintaining a predetermined course, even
though actual steering will still be handled manually at this stage.
The self-steering truck being used for sugar-cane transport is one of Volvo
Trucks' research and development projects for automated vehicles. Tests are
currently under way on an autonomous truck for mining operations in the
Kristineberg Mine in northern Sweden, and an autonomous refuse collection truck
is being tested in Gothenburg, Sweden. The aim is to evaluate how systems with
different degrees of automation can contribute to higher productivity, a better
working environment, and improved safety.
Facts
- Vehicle: self-steering Volvo VM configured for sugar-cane transportation.
- Automation: System with features such as GPS receivers, dual gyroscopes
(IMU), stepper motor unit for steering, and driver display.
LINK to high-resolution images LINK
[http://images.volvotrucks.com/latelogin.jspx?recordsWithCatalogName=Volvo+Truck
s:28205,Volvo+Trucks:28206,Volvo+Trucks:28207,Volvo+Trucks:28208,Volvo+Trucks:28
209,Volvo+Trucks:28210,Volvo+Trucks:28211 ]
LINK to film LINK [https://youtu.be/uOpjtz0Hluo ]
For broadcast-quality videos supporting this press release and more, please
visit http://www.thenewsmarket.com/volvotrucks
Press images and films are available in the Volvo Trucks image and film
gallery at http://images.volvotrucks.com
Volvo Trucks provides complete transport solutions for professional and
demanding customers, offering a full range of medium to heavy duty trucks.
Customer support is secured via a global network of more than 2,000 dealers and
workshops in more than 120 countries. Volvo trucks are assembled in 15
countries across the globe. In 2016, more than 102,800 Volvo trucks were
delivered worldwide. Volvo Trucks is part of Volvo Group, one of the world's
leading manufacturers of trucks, buses and construction equipment and marine
and industrial engines. The Group also provides solutions for financing and
service. Volvo's work is based on the core values of quality, safety and
environmental care.
Note to Editors:
A picture accompanying this release is available through the PA Photowire.
It can be downloaded from http://www.pa-mediapoint.press.net or viewed at
http://www.mediapoint.press.net or http://www.prnewswire.co.uk .
For further information, please contact:
Fredrik Klevenfeldt
Director Public Relations and Social Media
Volvo Trucks
Tel: +46-31-322-1106; email: fredrik.klevenfeldt@volvo.com
(Photo: http://mma.prnewswire.com/media/520784/Volvo_Trucks_Sugar_Cane.jpg )
SOURCE: Volvo Trucks
本プレスリリースは発表元が入力した原稿をそのまま掲載しております。また、プレスリリースへのお問い合わせは発表元に直接お願いいたします。
このプレスリリースには、報道機関向けの情報があります。
プレス会員登録を行うと、広報担当者の連絡先や、イベント・記者会見の情報など、報道機関だけに公開する情報が閲覧できるようになります。