Sumitomo Rubber Industries (SRI), the maker of Falken Tyres, has achieved a new advance in the continuing development of its Sensing Core intelligent tyre technology. There is a new wheel detachment function set to reach production vehicles for the first time this year. Sensing Core is a flexible, sensor-less analysis and monitoring system with many different applications, including tyre pressure and wear, uneven loads and hazardous road conditions.
In recent years, accidents and injuries caused by detached wheels have increased in markets such as Japan.When car and truck drivers switch over to winter tyres and may not tighten the wheel nuts sufficiently. Whilst many commercial vehicle operators use mechanical clips on the nuts as a visual check.
The government of Japan is keen to end loose wheel accidents. SRI believes that Sensing Core’s wheel detachment function is one step towards reaching this goal. In 2024, the function will be fitted to a car as standard equipment for the first time by an OEM customer. Discussions are ongoing with additional vehicle manufacturers, states the company.
Like previously developed ‘pillars’ of Sensing Core, the wheel detachment function works independently of tyre make, model or size. It analyses wheel-speed signals and other information from the vehicle’s controller area network (CAN) to detect whether any wheel nuts are loose – by as little as one millimetre.
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Sensing Core grew out of SRI’s original deflation warning system (DWS), an indirect tyre pressure monitoring system (TPMS). Fifteen OEMs from Europe, Japan, China and India fit its DWS to their cars. Now Sensing Core is the centrepiece of the peripheral services. SRI is developing to meet the future challenges of CASE vehicles and mobility as a service.
“We envisage that Sensing Core will make a significant contribution to the evolution and further development of mobility in the coming autonomous driving society,” said Dr. Bernd Löwenhaupt, Managing Director, Sumitomo Rubber Europe GmbH. “We will not only utilize the data obtained by Sensing Core, including road condition data, for vehicle control, but also pursue technological development with our eyes on the future integration of the data with societal information via cloud services.”
SRI’s fleet trials of cloud-based TPMS have a rental company in Japan. They have already helped to demonstrate the efficiency, cost and safety value of tyre-based information. Another future application of Sensing Core is in cloud-based tyre-wear monitoring. In this scenario, software in the cloud receives usage information from the vehicle and accurately predicts the resultant tyre wear. When a tyre is ready for replacement, an alert is sent to the driver or fleet manager.
Sensing Core’s benefits will be experienced by even more drivers in the coming years. At the Consumer Electronics Show (CES) in January 2024, SRI announced its investment in Viaduct. It is an AI-powered, connected-vehicle analytics company with whom it has been working on a proof-of-concept since 2023. Sensing Core will integrate with Viaduct’s product to predict tyre health across a vehicle fleet.
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