General Motors adds trickier roads to its semi-autonomous driving system

DETROIT — General Motors is adding 70,000 miles (113,000 kilometers) of roads across the United States and Canada to the area where its Cadillac Super Cruise semi-autonomous driving system can run, including some with cross traffic similar to those that have confused Tesla’s Autopilot system.

Currently the GM system can travel on 130,000 miles (210,000 kilometers) of limited-access highways that don’t have crossing traffic or intersections. It will expand to 200,000 miles (320,000 kilometers) in the fourth quarter of this year. GM says it has tested the system and it should spot cross traffic and brake. But it also tells drivers they have to pay attention and be ready to act if necessary.

Two people have died on Florida highways driving Teslas while using the company’s semi-autonomous Autopilot system. In each case neither the system nor the driver braked for tractor-trailers turning in front of the cars. The National Transportation Safety Board and the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration are investigating the most recent crash, which happened March 1 in Delray Beach, Florida. The first fatality occurred in 2016 near Gainesville.

Tesla’s system uses cameras, long-range radar and computers to detect objects in front of the cars to avoid collisions. The system also can keep a car in its lane, change lanes and navigate freeway interchanges.

The GM system, now only on the Cadillac CT6 sedan, also has cameras and radar to steer the car and keep a safe distance from objects in its path. But the big difference is that it uses a camera to watch drivers and make sure they are paying attention. Drivers can take their hands from the wheel, but the system makes sure they are looking forward.

If the GM system encounters railroad or pedestrian crossings or a crossing road with a stoplight or stop sign, it will tell a driver to return hands to the wheel. But the system will continue to pilot the car past emergency vehicle access points, crossings without a traffic control device, or intersections with a flashing yellow light. GM will only allow Super Cruise to be used on roads with a guardrail or other divider, or a median that’s at least four meters (13 feet) wide, spokesman Stefan Cross said.

Currently there are only about 7,000 CT6 models on the road with Super Cruise in the United States. The company won’t say if the system has been involved in any crashes, but several searches of news stories did not find any reports of crashes.

GM plans to make the system available on more Cadillac models next year, with other GM brands getting the system after 2020. (AP)

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