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Nissan launches ProPilot autonomous-driving system, with plans to bring it to the US

Nissan wants to put cars with significant autonomous-driving capability on sale by 2020, and it just took a big step toward that goal. The Japanese carmaker is introducing a system called ProPilot that allows cars to autonomously accelerate, brake, and steer in highway traffic.

ProPilot launches on the Nissan Serena minivan, which isn’t available in the U.S., but Nissan plans to offer the system here eventually. It uses a camera mounted at the top of the windshield to “see,” and is activated and deactivated by a switch on the steering wheel. The wheel also has a torque sensor that can tell whether drivers are gripping it, according to Automotive News (subscription required). Drivers are required to touch the wheel periodically to keep the system active.

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ProPilot can autonomously follow the car in front at a speed set by the driver, as long as that speed is between 30 kph and 100 kph (18 and 62 mph). The systems also keeps the car centered in its lane by reading lane markings. Nissan says ProPilot can brake a car to a full stop, and will then hold the brakes until the driver touches its activation switch, or presses the accelerator.The ability to follow other cars, make steering corrections, and autonomously brake are already available separately in many production cars, but ProPilot puts them all together.

Read more: Jaguar Land Rover takes self-driving tech off-road

Following ProPilot’s debut on the Serena in Japan, Nissan plans to bring the system to other markets, and add features. The carmaker says it will make ProPilot available in the U.S. and China, but did not specify when it would be available. The next market to get ProPilot will be Europe, where it will be offered on the Qashqai crossover sometime next year.

In 2018, Nissan plans to add the ability to automatically change lanes on the highway, much like Tesla’s Autopilot. It will follow that with a system that enables fully autonomous driving “on urban roads and in intersections” by 2020. Nissan and partner Renault have said they plan to introduce autonomous tech on ten mainstream, mass-market models over the next four years.

That puts Nissan in a good position in the race to introduce fully-autonomous cars. Over the past few years, several carmakers have promised to make the technology available in production cars, or have started research projects. However, the introduction of ProPilot comes as Tesla faces an investigation of a fatal crash involving its Autopilot system. The system was active when a Model S collided with a tractor trailer, leading to questions about the safety of semi-autonomous systems that still require humans to be kept in the loop.

Stephen Edelstein
Stephen is a freelance automotive journalist covering all things cars. He likes anything with four wheels, from classic cars…
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