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Geneva Motor Show,
Technology,
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Crossover,
Volvo
Volvo will be showing off its Active High Beam technology at the
Geneva Motor Show next week. The system will allow drivers to use their high beams all the time and adds another responsibility to the cameras mounted by the rearview mirror, making them detect traffic ahead, whether it be another car or a truck or motorcycle and in the same lane or oncoming. When a vehicle is detected, a special projector in the Xenon lamps can block out only the portion of the high beam that would impair the other driver. Volvo says the system is accurate down to a 1.5-inch margin around another object.
Active High Beam will be fitted to the
Volvo S60,
V60 and
XC60 and we have to assume they mean the non-US versions of those cars.
Audi has a similar technology that it calls "matrix beam lighting," and due to the way the US Federal Motor Vehicle Safety Standard code is written, such
active control of high beams is verboten on cars sold here.
The Swedish brand also plans to present a collision-avoidance technology it's calling a "world-first." The press release
below has more information and the accompanying video demonstrates the lighting tech.
Continue reading Volvo to unveil permanent high-beam headlamp technology [w/video]
Volvo to unveil permanent high-beam headlamp technology [w/video] originally appeared on
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