Engadget: Virginia Tech students create "smart" brake lights

Wed, Jun 11, 2008

Uncategorized


Oops! I found this scoop under the fridge. Sure it’s a bit old and crusty, but if you blow off the dust bunnies it’s still tasty. Since I luv Engadget and their quip-ridden blurbs I’ll just say… Take it away Engadget!

It’s only taken about a million years, but someone has finally decided that improvements are possible in automobile braking lights. Students from Virginia Tech have developed a new system that can show not just whether you’re stopping, but if you’re slowing down, when you’re about to stop, and how quickly you’re pressing the pedal. The concept uses an array of horizontally arranged LED lights — when you begin to slow, lights in the center glow orange, after a certain threshold side lights turn to red, and if you’re slamming on the brake, they’ll all flash red. The team, led by mechanical engineering Professor Mehdi Ahmadian, has plans for the system beyond the lab, though they speculate that it will be easier to add them as additional indicators on commercial vehicles at first. If this pans out, someday soon we may all be tailgating a totally psychedelic light show.

This could prove live-savingly useful to us 2-wheelers. What’s it gonna take to have it implemented?

,

Leave a Reply