Tesla’s Lack Of LIDAR For Autopilot Is Legit & Provides Competitive Edge, Research Hints

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This story about Tesla and LIDAR was first published by Gas2

Autonomous vehicles use electronic sensors to gather information about the outside world. Those sensors substitute for the eyes and ears of human drivers. The data they collect is fed to high-speed computers that turn it into digital maps that are then used to guide the car along its path. The typical assortment of sensors include ultrasound equipment, GPS input, cameras, radar transmitters, and LIDAR.

LIDAR is much like radar except it used pulses of light instead of pulses of radio waves to probe the surrounding environment. According to a Seeking Alpha writer, it is accurate to about 3/4″ when travelling at highway speeds while cameras are only accurate to about 4″ under similar conditions. If LIDAR is so accurate, doesn’t that mean it is an essential component for all autonomous vehicles?

Elon Musk doesn’t think so. He has said time and time again that LIDAR is not needed to make Tesla automobiles fully capable of driving themselves. Elon is “full of crap,” says Scott Miller, director of autonomous vehicle integration at General Motors. “The level of technology and knowing what it takes to do the mission, to say you can be a full Level 5 with just cameras and radars is not physically possible.”

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Waymo, the self-driving branch of Google, relies on LIDAR. In fact, a fight over LIDAR technology was the focus of a lawsuit Waymo brought against Uber after it hired former Waymo engineer Anthony Levandowski. Ford and Baidu have invested heavily in Velodyne, a company that manufactures LIDAR equipment. But the components of a typical LIDAR system are quite expensive compared to the low cost of digital cameras, ultrasound sensors, and radar receivers. The Seeking Alpha writer, Trent Eady, says that high cost is needlessly delaying the rollout of autonomous cars — which have the potential of saving tens of thousands of lives each year by reducing the number of fatalities in highway accidents.

New research conducted at several universities around the world finds that a combination of four cameras and an inertial measurement unit is good enough, at least at parking lot speeds. Further tests will be needed to verify performance at highway speeds, but the distance between cars on the road is usually measured in yards, not inches. Traffic-aware cruise control systems do a good job of maintaining safe distances between vehicles.

Eady says the new study confirms that Tesla has chosen the correct path forward as it pursues its goal of being the first company to offer fully autonomous cars. While the high cost of LIDAR technology will hold other companies back, Tesla will be gathering data from its entire fleet of cars daily*. By 2020, Tesla will have collected information from more than 11 billion miles of driving. Other companies will struggle to amass one tenth as much. Even if the cost of LIDAR drops in the future, other companies will lag years behind Tesla at getting their self-driving cars on the road*.

Score one for Tesla, says Eady. But wait. Last month, a tiny startup company called Strobe announced it had created a new “LIDAR on a chip” system that slashes the cost of the technology by 99%. It was quickly bought up by Cruise Automation, which itself was purchased by General Motors last year, which means GM now owns Strobe.

So, is LIDAR necessary to self-driving vehicles or not? There is no question that more information makes for better decision making, but LIDAR is often hampered by low-visibility situations — smoke, haze, snow, rain, and the like. Tesla has figured out how to use radar to create highly accurate digital maps, allowing it to de-emphasize its reliance on cameras. The presence or absence of LIDAR may prove to more of a marketing issue than one of safety in the future. “The new Belchfire 5000! Now with 20% more LIDAR!!”

But as a new report from the RAND Corporation points out, as long as self-driving systems are better at preventing accidents than human drivers, autonomous technology should be embraced sooner rather than later. The battle over LIDAR will be resolved at some point just as the tussle over what charging standards to adopt worldwide will get resolved. With it or without it, expect traffic injuries and fatalities to decline as computers that never get tired, never drive drunk, never have road rage episodes, and never get distracted become more common.

*CleanTechnica’s Mike Barnard made these points long ago, we’re happy to note. For more on that, see:

Tesla & Google Disagree About LIDAR — Which Is Right?

Tesla Has The Right Approach To Self-Driving Cars


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Steve Hanley

Steve writes about the interface between technology and sustainability from his home in Florida or anywhere else The Force may lead him. He is proud to be "woke" and doesn't really give a damn why the glass broke. He believes passionately in what Socrates said 3000 years ago: "The secret to change is to focus all of your energy not on fighting the old but on building the new." You can follow him on Substack and LinkedIn but not on Fakebook or any social media platforms controlled by narcissistic yahoos.

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