Construction equipment autonomy (part 1): How far has onboard tech come?

Danfoss Power Solutions is known as a specialist electric and hydraulic power solutions provider, but it also has a relatively long history within the autonomous equipment segment.

Danfoss is no stranger to autonomy, with its Davis research project initiated in 2017 Danfoss is no stranger to autonomy, with its Davis research project initiated in 2017. Photo: Danfoss

CE caught up with Peter Bleday, head of autonomous vehicles at Danfoss Power Solutions, and asked him to clarify the company鈥檚 relationship with autonomy.

Bleday says, 鈥淥ne thing that not everyone realises is that one of our billion-dollar-sized divisions is our controls division, where we have electronics, control valves, etc, that have been working on vehicle control for a long time.

鈥淥ut of that electronics has come our PLUS+1 Guide software suite, which has been around since 2004 and is used globally for control software on vehicles.

鈥淔or us autonomy was a natural progression as we start to see control systems getting more and more advanced. Autonomy was the obvious next step, adding semi-autonomous or autonomous functions to vehicles.

Ramping up autonomy research

鈥淚n around 2017, we started an R&D project鈥alled the Davis Project and it was really built up as a 鈥榗an we do it?鈥 and 鈥榳hat can we do?鈥

鈥淭hat R&D team of three or four people continued until early 2020, when the question came from the business side, which was 鈥榳hat can we present to customers?鈥 and 鈥榟ow can we help our OEMs start to see this vision?鈥

鈥淪ince my first day, in August 2020, I have really focused on the question of how we help OEMs of any size start to add semi-autonomous or autonomous functions to their vehicles.鈥

Peter Bleday is head of autonomous vehicles division at Danfoss Power Solutions Peter Bleday is head of autonomous vehicles division at Danfoss Power Solutions. Photo: Danfoss

Danfoss鈥 journey into autonomy began in earnest with technology for agriculture equipment.

In theory, the challenges of building autonomous functions into an agricultural machine should not compare to those of construction, where sites can be extremely complex and generally more populated.

Bleday doesn鈥檛 quite see it that way. He says, 鈥淒on鈥檛 think necessarily about automating the machine, but think about all the tasks a machine can do and automating those.

鈥淚n agriculture you do have a lot of niche machines with one task, so those tasks are easier to automate.

鈥淏ecause of that, we鈥檒l see what looks like a fully autonomous vehicle much more quickly in those cases.

鈥淚n construction, you have excavators, skid steers, compact track loaders, wheel loaders, etc, that are utility vehicles 鈥 they don鈥檛 just do one task, they do many.

鈥淲hile there are some vehicles, like a soil compactor or a double drum roller, that might be more single-task oriented, that鈥檚 not often the case in construction.

鈥淔rom a technology standpoint, I don鈥檛 think the challenge is much different, it鈥檚 more the use cases and the how do you create value.

鈥淭he other thing I would say is that the environment around a construction site is very different. Sometimes you might be sharing a road with cars or have just have a few cones separating you.

鈥淕enerally, there鈥檚 going to be a lot more human interaction around a construction site than around a farm.鈥

Levels of autonomy

Along with many people working with construction technology, Bleday has his own interpretation of what constitutes true autonomy and about the point in the road that has currently been reached by construction.

He says, 鈥淚f you think about Level 1 autonomy, it includes simple things like anti-lock brakes.

鈥淭he way I think about it is that you鈥檙e doing two things: you鈥檙e making a mental decision to do something, then physically doing it. With anti-lock brakes, you鈥檙e making the mental and physical decision to press the brake pedal; the car is helping you, by making sure it pumps the brakes.

鈥淲ith Level 2, again, you鈥檙e still making the mental decision, but maybe the car was taking some of the physical capabilities on for you. Some of the older cruise controls are a good example of that.

鈥淟evel 3, we really think about as the vehicle starting to make decisions for you.

鈥淵ou might say 鈥業 want to plough this field鈥 鈥 the vehicle will figure out what the field size is, maybe avoid obstacles along the way, figure out the best patterns to plough for the area.

鈥淪o the vehicle is starting to make decisions, even though the operator may still be on board.

鈥淭he way we approach this is by taking some real-world experience and giving that experience to the vehicle. This semi-autonomous piece is pretty synonymous with both on-highway and off-highway.

鈥淲here I think they differ is at Level 4 and Level 5. When we think about Level 4, we think about multiple vehicles running mostly by themselves, but with an operator mostly on site; there might be one or two operators on the site, with three or four vehicles, doing their own jobs.

鈥淟evel 5 is fully autonomous; nobody鈥檚 there.

鈥淲hat I would say about today is that we鈥檙e seeing a lot of spectrum between Level 1 and 3, across a lot of vehicles, with a bigger push toward Level 3, in construction specifically.

鈥淭he reason for this, I think, is that you have an increasing lack of experienced labour, let alone a lack of labour in general.

鈥淩ework, quality of work, things that are costly to a contractor; if you can add some capability onto the vehicle, you can give the vehicle that five years of experience that you don鈥檛 have with a novice operator.

鈥淯ltimately, there鈥檚 a lot of value around driver assist technology.鈥

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In Part 2, coming shortly, Peter Bleday explains more about how autonomous vehicle technology available today is already adding value to an industry challenged by a lack of experienced operators.

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