Posts Tagged ‘Actros’

From the LP 1620 to the Actros: 50 years of progress have drastically reduced the strain on drivers

Wednesday, May 12th, 2010

Enhanced ride comfort and intelligent assistance systems support today’s professional truck drivers
World’s first truck test drive to investigate stress on drivers successfully completed
ECG analysis of test drivers shows marked reduction in physical stress
EEG measurements confirm markedly faster responses by drivers in the
Actros
Mercedes Actors For sale at Trucklocator.co.uk
The comparative test drive began in the early morning. The starting point was the main gate of the Daimler assembly plant in Wörth. The tour was 542 kilometres long, leading via Stuttgart over the San Bernardino pass to the Swiss village of Lostallo.

The two test vehicles were worlds apart: a modern Actros semitrailer/tractor combination rated at 440 hp competing against a 200 hp LP 1620 with trailer.

The two vehicles are separated by around 50 years of progress resulting from develop­ment work in the field of commercial vehicles. This is manifested in the Actros not only in the form of substantially increased power reserves, a fully automatic twelve-speed transmission and a wear-free retarder serving as an additional brake system to back up the electronically controlled high-pressure brake system. The Actros also features state-of-the-art assistance systems offering greater truck safety than would have been conceivable at the time of the LP 1620 (year of construction: 1964).

These include:
Telligent® distance control system, which automatically maintains the preset safety distance from the vehicle in front.
Active Brake Assist which, in addition to automatically maintaining the preset safety distance, also initiates emergency braking at maximum braking force automatically on detecting an acute danger of a rear-end collision.
Telligent® Lane Assistant, which emits an acoustic signal to warn the driver of an imminent danger of leaving the lane.
Telligent® Stability Control and Adaptive ESP®, which reduce the danger of skidding substantially during cornering or evasive manoeuvres.
Other features of the Actros which played a crucial role in this test demonstrated the extent of the vehicle’s technical superiority over its ancestor and the degree of attention which is devoted to ride comfort today. Such features include the markedly improved soundproofing and air conditioning of the cab, tailor-made seating comfort and ergonomically designed controls, for example.

Methods of measuring drivers’ physical and mental strain
The overall effects of these benefits are felt by today’s professional truck drivers on motorways, on narrow country roads and in dense urban traffic. They can also be quantified using cutting-edge measuring methods. Researchers at Daimler have developed various methods of objectively evaluating a vehicle’s physiologi­cal safety. These are now being applied for the first time in the ongoing develop­ment of commercial vehicles. The main focus is on physiological measurements of typical stress indicators, such as the driver’s heart rate. This is regarded as a reliable and continuously measurable cumulative indicator which provides an accurate reading of both mental and physical stress processes. Possible causes of an increased rate include stress due to heavy traffic, poor weather conditions and visibility. Equally, interior noise levels, inadequate ventilation and poor chassis comfort also have a negative impact. To enable the evaluation and ongoing improvement of these aspects, computers on board test vehicles and measuring devices on test drivers record all the values which provide an indication of the driver’s physical condition. These results add up to an objective picture of the way the vehicle’s engineering and technology affects the driver’s behaviour and his ability to drive effectively and safely.

Recording brain waves by means of EEG (electro-encephalography) provides information on mental stress in certain situations during a journey, such as narrow stretches due to roadworks or steep uphill and downhill driving.

Cap with 16 sensors records brain waves
In the test “Actros versus LP 1620″ the Daimler development engineers took a close look not only at the vehicles, but at the drivers, too. The test conditions called for professional drivers with decades of truck-driving experience. The selected “contestants” were aged 56 and 49, as the test was also intended to provide findings on whether age plays a decisive role with regard to the physical and mental stress involved in driving a truck.
Before the Actros and the LP 1620 hit the road, the drivers each donned an EEG cap fitted with 16 sensors to record their brain waves during the trip. The measurements began exactly half an hour after setting off for Lostallo, because for all the drivers’ professional experience, the Daimler researchers wanted to be sure that the test candidates had adjusted to the test conditions and rid themselves of any initial nervousness.

There were no signs of any nervousness on the long motorway stretches up to the Swiss border. The drivers reacted in almost identical fashion to the acoustic signals which were deliberately transmitted almost unnoticeably to their ears. These signals consisted of a sequence of random tones consisting of 80 percent 1000 Hertz tones and 20 percent 2000 Hertz tones. The more exacting the driving situation, the slower and less effectively the brain is able to process the rare 2000 Hertz stimuli. These changes can be measured with the aid of EEG. According to the EEG analysis, the drivers’ brains processed these stimuli quickly during this stage of the trip. This means that the drivers would be able to respond quickly if the signal were connected with the state of the vehicle or the traffic situation.

Minimal mental strain in the Actros
The electrodes diagnosed a quite different situation in the LP 1620 during the uphill stretch to the San Bernardino. 26 kilometres of winding road with numerous tight spots and dark tunnels placed such demands on the driver’s concentration that cognitive processing of the transmitted tones was slowed down by more than 300 milliseconds. Virtually the same findings resulted when the older driver took command of the LP 1620 on the uphill and downhill stretch to the San Bernardino during the return leg on the following day. His readings were only negligibly higher than those of the younger driver.
The two drivers reacted quite differently at the wheel of the Actros, however. Even during the high-stress phase around the Swiss mountain pass, the perception time for the signal tones slowed down only negligibly – and only for the older driver. The younger driver displayed a constant, fast response time throughout the entire journey.

The retardation in processing of the stimuli in the LP 1620 in comparison to the Actros amounted to as much as 400 milliseconds. While this may appear minimal, when this value is placed in the context of the cognitive sequence “perceive signal - respond” or “see brake light, perceive meaning and brake oneself” it results in the brakes being applied nine metres later in a truck travelling at 80 km/h.

Only negligible rise in pulse at the wheel of the Actros
ECG analysis of the two drivers also demonstrated the extent to which technical advances relieve the strain encountered at the wheel of a truck. The heart rate – essentially the mirror of physical stress – increased by ten percent in the younger driver at the wheel of the LP 1620 in comparison to when driving the Actros. The older driver’s heart beat 20 percent faster on the uphill stretch to the San Bernardino. This is where the age difference was most clearly apparent, as it is not only the high steering effort and the non-synchromesh manual transmission that call for a good physical condition. The younger driver enjoyed an additional benefit on the return trip in the Actros.

Thanks to the high power reserves of his tractor, he was able to set off half an hour later than his colleague in the LP 1620. The 40-tonner negotiated the bends leading to the San Bernardino tunnel at an average speed of 40 km/h – twice as fast as the LP 1620 with its permissible gross weight of 32 tonnes. By the time he reached the top of the road, he had already caught up with his colleague. And he managed to stay relaxed throughout the ascent, as the subsequent analysis of the ECG and EEG curves showed.

Mercedes-Benz BlueTec EEV trucks

Tuesday, February 9th, 2010

In certain output classes of the Actros and Axor, the BlueTec EEV version has been gradually introduced from autumn 2009 to July 2010
Atego > 12 t available in all output classes from March 2010
For the Econic, BlueTec EEV is part of the extended specification from January 2010
Particulates reduced by one third versus Euro 5
Country-specific subsidies for EEV technology

EEV (Enhanced Environmentally Friendly Vehicle) is a classification used for engines which comply with an even more stringent exhaust emission standard than Euro 5. The EEV standard reduces particulate emissions by roughly a further one third compared to the already stringent Euro 5 limits. In extending its truck range, Mercedes-Benz will be gradually introducing EEV versions in certain output classes of the Mercedes-Benz Actros, Axor and Atego up to July 2010. BlueTec EEV is already part of the extended specification for the Mercedes-Benz Econic from January 2010. Incentives are offered for this technology in some European countries. The engines in the OM 920 and OM 501 series have been developed even further for this purpose. Mercedes-Benz commercial vehicles equipped with this feature can be recognised by the additional “BlueTec EEV” model plate.

Since October 2009, the optional, ex factory availability of BlueTec EEV vehicles has applied to on-road Mercedes-Benz Actros trucks in the output classes 300 kW (408 hp), 320 kW (435 hp) and 335 kW (456 hp), as well as the Mercedes-Benz Axor in output classes 210 kW (286 hp) and 240 kW (326 hp). From July 2010 the Actros will be available in a BlueTec EEV version for the variants with 235 kW (320 hp) and 265 kW (360 hp), thereby extending the BlueTec EEV range in the OM 501 LA engine series (the largest engine developing 350 kW is not available in an EEV version).

From March 2010 the entire Mercedes-Benz Atego series with all output classes of the OM 924 LA engines (130 kW (177 hp), 160 kW (218 hp)) and OM 926 LA engines (175 kW (238 hp), 188 kW (256 hp), 210 kW (286 hp)) will be available in EEV versions.

As a significant product enhancement and to improve value retention even further, BlueTec EEV is included in the extended standard equipment of the Mercedes-Benz Econic, which is frequently in service as a municipal or distribution vehicle in environmentally sensitive inner-city areas. This applies to both the 210 kW (286 hp) and the 240 kW (326 hp) diesel engine variants.

The technology for compliance with the voluntary EEV emission standard is based on the new BlueTec 5 diesel ­technology from Mercedes-Benz, which involves the installation of additional technological features. In the EEV version of the OM 501 LA engine, a change to the engine’s characteristic map has led to a reduction in particulate emissions by more than 30 percent. To this end the injection nozzle pressure was increased, and the injection nozzle/line/attachment system was redesigned. Substantial technical modifications were made to the OM 920 LA engine series, of which EEV versions can be ordered in all available output classes as the OM 924 LA EEV and OM 926 LA EEV. Additional exhaust gas aftertreatment is not necessary. In terms of maintenance, operating life, fuel consumption, weight and installation space, the EEV solution adopted for Mercedes-Benz trucks is at the same level as with the well-proven BlueTec 5 technology.

Subsidies for EEV technology: in Germany, EEV is subsidised for trucks over 12 t permissible gross vehicle weight under a government-approved support programme operated by the KfW Bank (redefined figures will apply from spring 2010 in Germany) In the Netherlands there is also a subsidy available under a government support programme. A subsidy in the form of a ten percent reduction in motorway toll charges is also granted for EEV vehicles in Austria. Customers whose Actros is already equipped with an NOx sensor (from autumn 2007) are able to retrofit the EEV technology, thereby also benefitting from the reduced toll charges.