The new rule requires all passenger vehicles weighing 10,000 pounds (4,500 kilograms) or less to have forward collision warning, automatic emergency braking and pedestrian detection braking.
The new rule requires all passenger vehicles weighing 10,000 pounds or less to have forward collision warning, automatic emergency braking and pedestrian detection braking. The standards require ...
Automatic emergency braking (AEB) will be standard on all passenger cars and light trucks in the US by September 2029. The NHTSA says this rule is expected to “significantly” reduce rear-end ...
The National Highway Traffic Safety Administration unveiled the final version of the new regulation on Monday and called it the most significant safety rule in the past two decades. In these ...
A federal rule that requires automatic emergency braking systems in cars and light trucks by 2029 could be a tough compliance hurdle for automakers but further the industry's efforts to use ...
Automatic emergency braking is now the law of the land. The US Department of Transportation finalized a new Federal Motor Vehicle Safety Standard requiring all vehicle manufacturers to include ...
Automatic emergency braking will have to come standard on all U.S. new passenger vehicles in five years. In the not-too-distant future, automatic emergency braking will have to come standard on all ...
The new rule raises the bar by requiring these systems to improve performance at higher speeds and adds new requirements for pedestrians.
MESA (AZFamily)—The government estimates that a new rule requiring automatic emergency braking to be standard on all new cars ...
The new rule requires all passenger vehicles weighing 10,000 pounds (4,500 kilograms) or less to have forward collision warning, automatic emergency braking and pedestrian detection braking. The ...
The new rule requires all passenger vehicles weighing 10,000 pounds (4,500 kilograms) or less to have forward collision warning, automatic emergency braking and pedestrian detection braking.
落とした食べ物は、はたして食べても安全なのだろうか? 答えのひとつに、素早く拾えば大丈夫というものがある。いわゆる「3秒ルール」だ。よく似たルールは世界中にあり、米国では「5秒ルール」と呼ばれている。 それだけに、こうしたルールに ...