Close X
Saturday, November 23, 2024
ADVT 
Reviews

Further With Ford

Benjamin Yong , 29 Jul, 2015 01:03 PM
  • Further With Ford
It turns out that Palo Alto, CA, isn’t just for the Facebooks and Googles of the world anymore, as more companies outside of the traditional tech world turn towards modernizing their products and services for the future. 
 
Ford is one of those businesses, choosing the San Francisco Bay Area to build their Research and Innovation Centre at the start of 2015. For the first time, the fifth annual “Go Further with Ford” trends conference was held at the new facility in June, rather than near their home base of Dearborn, Michigan.
 
The purpose of the conference is to demonstrate to media how Ford’s four pillars - Quality, Green, Safe and Smart - fit into tomorrow’s automotive landscape. And this year specifically, what part the research centre has to play.
 
 
“We wanted to take this chance to discuss with you a couple of things - mainly why we’re growing our presence here in Silicon Valley. Also our view of the future of high tech driving and our commitment to innovate with excellence as well as with speed,” says Raj Nair, Ford Motor Company group vice president and chief technical officer.
 
“It’s our plan to take Ford to the next level in connectivity, mobility, autonomous vehicles, the customer experience as well as data analytics. So this will lead the industry in delivering connectivity solutions.”
 
 
Self-driving cars is something that’s on everyone’s minds these days, and Nair compared the steps that Ford are now taking to achieve this to the innovative things Henry Ford did over a hundred years ago while building the company. He admits there is still a long way to go, and on a scale of 0 to five, five being full autonomy, they’re still at level one.
 
Guests broke into different “immersion” groups to learn more about the various topics that Ford is researching and working on, like technology that will one day be used in the development of a fully autonomous vehicle. Out in the parking lot, Joseph Urhahne, who works at Ford Research and Advanced Engineering in Germany, was on hand demonstrating remote control parking in a Ford Edge concept car.
 
 
Using a special Bluetooth-enabled watch and key fob, he was able to back the Edge into a parking spot, albeit after a few technical difficulties. Urhahne says there is probably about a five-year horizon before we see a similar feature become practical.
 
Another group was led by Jennifer Shaw, supervisor of driver assistance electronics. She drew a parallel between now-common interior creature comforts and ones that are still up-and-coming.
 
 
“Cupholders 30 years ago were a novelty item. Today, I don’t think you can buy a car with less than six,” jokes Shaw, adding that it’s become a mainstay in North America. A similar pattern is happening with options like rearview cameras, something that many drivers now rely on. She says there are now 15 million vehicles on the road equipped with them, and by 2018 it will be standard on all new Ford models. 
 
Items other stations looked at included the changing driving behaviours of new generations, and what role the auto industry has to play in addressing problems such as cellphone use on the road; how Ford is increasingly using more virtual reality hardware and software in the creation of vehicles and vehicle testing; what biodegradable and sustainable materials are being converted into everything from seats to dash trim; cutting-edge 3-D printing technology used to make mass-produced parts; and even experimentation with multi-modal transportation devices like bicycles, which may help passengers get to their next destination easier after parking the car in big cities.
 
 
To learn more, visit fordsvl.com.

MORE Reviews ARTICLES

The Best Sporty Cars of The Century

The Best Sporty Cars of The Century
My Picks For The Best Sports Cars From  The Past Century With Today’s Price Tag

The Best Sporty Cars of The Century

2014 Range Rover Sport HSE: Bold Design with Dynamic SUV Performance Features

2014 Range Rover Sport HSE: Bold Design with Dynamic SUV Performance Features
The Range Rover Sport is an all-new SUV from the ground up. To make it worthy of the Sport name, the inner shell of the vehicle is made of aluminium, which makes the Sport much lighter than most of its competition. In fact it is over 360kg lighter than last year’s model, which makes it very light compared to the competition. 

2014 Range Rover Sport HSE: Bold Design with Dynamic SUV Performance Features

2014 Jaguar X F: Refined Performance, Sports Car Dynamics, Luxury Sedan Features

2014 Jaguar X F: Refined Performance, Sports Car Dynamics, Luxury Sedan Features
If there is one make that has garnered more attention than any other make of car in all the years of writing automotive it has been Jaguar. They seem to have a mystique about them that car people and even none car people just love. 

2014 Jaguar X F: Refined Performance, Sports Car Dynamics, Luxury Sedan Features

2014 Ford Focus ST: The High Performance Hot Hatch

2014 Ford Focus ST: The High Performance Hot Hatch
The Focus ST is a car that any aged car enthusiast will like, it offers more than enough power, good handling and reasonable cargo room for its size

2014 Ford Focus ST: The High Performance Hot Hatch

2014 Honda Civic SI: The Faster & More Efficient Copue

2014 Honda Civic SI: The Faster & More Efficient Copue
The Honda Civic Si underwent a big change under the hood in 2012 when the current ninth-generation Honda Civic Si was introduced, stirring up some controversy amongst enthusiasts.

2014 Honda Civic SI: The Faster & More Efficient Copue

2014 Range Rover SPORT HSE: Bold and Dynamic SUV

2014 Range Rover SPORT HSE: Bold and Dynamic SUV
It is not often that you can say a new vehicle has personality, as so many of them are similar in styling and equipment. That is not the case with the Range Rover Sport HSE, which I tested as it has a host of little quirks that were annoying and things I really loved.

2014 Range Rover SPORT HSE: Bold and Dynamic SUV