E-Class Mercedes TecDay Feature: Safety Systems In The New E-Class & S-Class From Spring 2009


The Mercedes-Benz E-Class is a range of executive cars manufactured by Mercedes-Benz in various engine and body configurations. Produced since September 1953, the E-Class falls as a midrange in the Mercedes line-up, and has been marketed worldwide across five generations.

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In the new E-Class and S-Class from spring 2009: Synergy of sophisticated safety technologies makes new Mercedes models part of the "thinking" process

Leipzig – By introducing around a dozen new or modified systems, Mercedes-Benz is adding a new chapter to its long history of passenger- car safety. Following on from their successes achieved in the domain of occupant protection, the Mercedes experts will be focussing more than ever on avoiding traffic accidents and reducing accident severity, with the driver assistance systems being unveiled in the new E-Class and the model year 2009 S-Class from spring 2009 onwards set to play a crucial role. Mercedes-Benz is implementing a globally unique synergy of sophisticated safety technologies to give its cars extra "senses" and added intelligence. All of which makes Mercedes models part of the "thinking" process – cars that can see, sense and act autonomously. In addition to this, the Mercedes saloons show the way ahead when it comes to occupant protection and set new standards with their "electronic" crumple zones.

Like tried-and-trusted Mercedes inventions such as ABS, ESP®, Brake Assist and PRE-SAFE®, the new assistance systems have been adapted based on real-life

accident findings. The aim behind their development was to prevent extremely frequent types of collision and collisions with serious consequences by focussing on the causes of accidents: distance to other vehicles, speed, drowsiness, darkness and lane departure.

To this end, Mercedes-Benz is for the first time using cameras alongside radar sensors. These long-range cameras monitor the area around the car and are able to interpret critical situations. By way of example, new camera-based assistance systems help the driver by keeping the car safely on track, detecting speed-limit signs, controlling the headlamps in line with the current driving situation and enhancing visibility in the dark.

The new E-Class will be the world's first car to feature headlamps that adapt automatically in line with the current driving situation. Adaptive Highbeam Assist detects oncoming vehicles or moving vehicles in front with their lights on and adjusts the headlamps continuously so as to always provide the best possible headlamp range – without dazzling other motorists. In this way, the low-beam range can be increased from its current level of 65 metres to up to 300 metres.

If the road ahead is clear, the system switches to high beam with a minimum of fuss. This Mercedes development is therefore fundamentally different to conventional systems of this type, since the latter merely switch between low beam and high beam.

Adaptive Highbeam Assist: the best possible light in any traffic situation

Tests show that motorists who use Adaptive Highbeam Assist are safer on the road in the dark because they see pedestrians, cyclists or obstacles on the road up to 150 metres earlier than is the case with conventional low beam. What's more, the system helps to relieve driver stress as there is no longer any need to repeatedly flick the stalk on the steering wheel. So the driver can concentrate more on actually driving the car. Once activated, Adaptive Highbeam Assist always provides the best possible headlamp range.

At the heart of the system is a camera, located on the inside of the windscreen, which sends new data every 40 milliseconds so that the range of the variable-control bi-xenon headlamps can be adjusted.

Mercedes-Benz has further developed its Night View Assist system, which illuminates a long stretch of the road ahead using invisible infrared light. The second generation of this system features a special pedestrian detection function: as soon as the system detects pedestrians ahead of the car, they are highlighted on the display.

Lane Keeping Assist: warning if the car leaves its lane

Another new assistance system developed by Mercedes can prevent accidents caused by the car leaving its lane. More than a third of all road users killed in Germanyare involved in this type of accident. This is why Mercedes-Benz has developed a "forward-looking" system for safe motoring called Lane Keeping Assist. Its camera monitors the line taken by the car and the driver's control inputs on a permanent basis, allowing the system to detect when the car leaves its lane unintentionally and if there is a risk of an accident. If this is the case, the system warns the driver in plenty of time, prompting them to counter-steer by making the steering wheel vibrate with a series of short, clearly discernable pulses.

Unlike conventional systems of this type, the Mercedes assistance system also assesses the driver's actions and, by doing so, can ascertain reliably whether the car has left its lane intentionally or unintentionally. There is therefore no warning if, for example, the driver accelerates before overtaking or joining a motorway, brakes heavily or steers into a bend.

If the system detects that the car is leaving its lane unintentionally, it activates an electric motor in the steering wheel, causing the steering wheel to vibrate. The timing of the warning depends on the width of the road and the type of lane markings. If the car crosses over a continuous line marking on the road, as opposed to a broken line, the system emits its warning earlier.

Speed Limit Assist: a camera with an eye for traffic signs

A further new assistance system reminds the driver of the current speed limit in force: the camera on the windscreen detects speed-limit signs as the car drives past them and then indicates the speed limit on the display in the speedometer. The driver therefore remains fully aware of the current speed limit, enabling them to adapt the car's speed accordingly. The display goes out as soon as the speed limit is lifted.

Thanks to the huge strides forward made in image-processing technology, Speed Limit Assist is able to work in real time, analysing the images within a fraction of a second – as the car drives past – and providing the driver with the required information instantaneously. Plus it makes no difference whether the speed-limit sign is at the side of the road or on a gantry above the road.

Furthermore, Speed Limit Assist evaluates the data provided by the navigation system's digital map, allowing it to check the plausibility of the camera image. By way of example, the last speed limit detected disappears from the display as soon as the navigation system detects that the car has entered a built-up area.

ATTENTION ASSIST: drowsiness detection system fitted as standard in the E-Class and S-Class

Thanks to a new technology, future Mercedes models will have a keen sense of their drivers' awareness. The aim is to detect driver drowsiness in plenty of time so as to warn them before they fall asleep momentarily. According to scientific studies, around a quarter of all serious motorway accidents are caused by driver drowsiness.

The new ATTENTION ASSIST system is equipped with highly sensitive sensors which monitor the driver's behaviour, the current driving situation and over 70 other parameters. By doing this, the system is able to detect when the driver's concentration starts to slip. This permanent form of monitoring is important for detecting the floating transition from awakeness to drowsiness and for warning the driver at an early stage. In addition to the speed, lateral acceleration and longitudinal acceleration, the system also detects use of the turn indicators and pedals as well as certain control inputs and external influences such as side winds or road unevenness, for example.

Observation of steering behaviour has proven to be extremely meaningful. Field tests carried out by the Mercedes engineers over a period of several years, involving over 550 participants to date, show that drowsy drivers make minor steering errors that are often corrected quickly and abruptly. These are detected by a highly sensitive steering wheel angle sensor. If ATTENTION ASSIST detects typical indicators of drowsiness based on these and other data, it warns the driver by emitting an audible signal and flashing up a message on the display: "ATTENTION ASSIST. Break!"

ATTENTION ASSIST will be specified as standard for the new E-Class and the model year 2009 S-Class.

PRE-SAFE®: tensioning of the seat belts before an unavoidable accident

Further standard equipment Mercedes-Benz offers for these models includes the PRE-SAFE® anticipatory occupant protection system. Based on information received from sensors, it identifies situations that might turn into accidents and instinctively activates preventive occupant-protection measures, allowing the seat belts and airbags to deploy with maximum effect in the event of an impact. PRE‑SAFE® therefore bridges the gap between active safety and passive safety; it is networked to Brake Assist and the Electronic Stability Program (ESP®), whose sensors recognise potentially dangerous driving situations and then transmit this information to the electronic control units within milliseconds.

In another first, Mercedes-Benz will also be using the information provided by the short-range radar to trigger the seat belt tensioners at the very last moment before an unavoidable collision, thus greatly reducing the forces exerted on the driver and front passenger during the crash.

Radar technology: sensor with medium-range detection capability and greater range

DISTRONIC PLUS and Brake Assist PLUS – Mercedes assistance systems based on sophisticated radar technology – are highly effective at helping to prevent accidents. Analysis of accident-research data has shown that this technology can prevent a fifth of all head-to-tail crashes in Germany on average. On motorways, the accident rate can be reduced by as much as 36 percent.

Mercedes-Benz has further enhanced the radar technology for the new E-Class and the model year 2009 S-Class. The newly developed long-range radar sensor will have a range of 200 metres instead of 150 metres as previously. In addition, the sensor now has medium-range detection capability, allowing monitoring of the area up to around 60 metres ahead of the car with a 60-degree beam width. This new technology enables even more accurate monitoring of the traffic situation in front of the car and even better detection of dynamic events such as a car in front swerving suddenly. The two wide-beam short-range radar sensors (80-degree beam width) with a range of around 30 metres are still employed.

PRE-SAFE® Brake: autonomous emergency braking as "electronic" crumple zone

As well as warning drivers in the new E-Class and the S-Class of an imminent head-to-tail crash, radar technology can also assist with emergency braking. The sensors are networked with Brake Assist PLUS, which automatically calculates the brake pressure required to prevent an imminent collision. This braking assistance, available as soon as the driver hits the brake pedal, allows controlled, targeted braking or – if necessary – emergency braking, depending on the car's speed and the distance to the vehicle in front.

If the driver fails to react to the warnings given by Brake Assist PLUS, the PRE-SAFE® Brake intervenes and brakes the car autonomously: around 1.6 seconds before the calculated impact point, the system initiates autonomous partial braking and decelerates the car with around 40 percent of the maximum braking power.

In the new E-Class and the model year 2009 S-Class, this safety system provides a further function: if the driver still fails to act after automatic partial braking, the PRE-SAFE® Brake activates the maximum braking power around 0.6 seconds before the now unavoidable impact and, as a consequence, can greatly reduce the severity of the accident. The system therefore acts like an "electronic crumple zone", offering the car occupants even greater protection.

Occupant protection: over 150 crash tests for the highest possible level of Mercedes safety

During the course of its development to date, the new E-Class has successfully come through over 150 high-speed crash tests and more than 17,000 realistic crash simulations, including around 40 different crash tests which the saloon had to pass in order to gain world-wide approval and nine extremely demanding, in-house impact tests, some of which go well beyond the statutory requirements.

The Sindelfingen-based engineers have continued to perfect the crumple-zone principle invented by Mercedes safety pioneer Béla Barényi. The front deformation zones of the latest Mercedes passengers cars work on several levels – making them even more effective as the impact forces are distributed over a wide area and can be made to bypass the passenger cell. Likewise the increased use of ultra-high-strength steel alloys helps the bodyshell to withstand high impact loads. These steel grades offer maximum strength whilst minimising weight. Around 72 percent of all the bodyshell panels for the new E-Class are made from sophisticated high-tech steel grades – a new record in passenger-car development.

With a total of seven airbags fitted as standard, not to mention seat-belt tensioners, belt force limiters and NECK-PRO crash-responsive head restraints, the new E‑Class will offer an even more extensive package of safety equipment than its predecessor. Self-adaptive belt-force limiters in the rear, which adapt automatically to suit the size of the rear passengers, will be introduced for the first time in autumn 2009.

Pedestrian protection: new E-Class with active bonnet fitted as standard

Mercedes-Benz is continuing its long-standing and very successful commitment to protecting those road users who are most at risk. Standard equipment for the new E-Class includes an active bonnet, which greatly reduces the risk of injury to pedestrians. In the event of an accident, a system of springs raises the rear section of the bonnet by 50 millimetres within milliseconds, thus enlarging the deformation zone. One special feature of this Mercedes system is its reversibility: drivers can reset the active bonnet themselves without having to visit a workshop.

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Mercedes-Benz TecDay Special Feature: Safety Systems In The New E-Class And S-Class From Spring 2009


Well there you have it. E-Class gets pop up hood among other things and S-Class facelift is this spring also. Exciting times at MB.


M
 
Re: Sub systems press releases....

Pioneers as always:D
 
Re: Mercedes TecDay Feature: Safety Systems In The New E-Class & S-Class From Spring

All just bow down now:bowdown::bowdown::D
 
Re: Mercedes TecDay Feature: Safety Systems In The New E-Class & S-Class From Spring

It is really impressive, all that tech from Mercedes. So respect from me!

:t-cheers:
 
Re: Mercedes TecDay Feature: Safety Systems In The New E-Class & S-Class From Spring

Have you guys noticed the front end of the car in the first picture? Hello W212!!​
 
Re: Mercedes TecDay Feature: Safety Systems In The New E-Class & S-Class From Spring

Looks like a W204 to me.

M
 
Re: Mercedes TecDay Feature: Safety Systems In The New E-Class & S-Class From Spring

Yep!! It is - and there is also a short part that shows the interior, I think…but I'm not completey sure about this…
 
Re: Mercedes TecDay Feature: Safety Systems In The New E-Class & S-Class From Spring

Yep!! It is - and there is also a short part that shows the interior, I think…but I'm not completey sure about this…

We see the dials and GPS cover for sure, so the dash from above. However, I don't know what the interior we see with the A/C flow is. Can't see a big GPS-cover, so doesn't look like a W212...:t-hands:
 
Re: Mercedes TecDay Feature: Safety Systems In The New E-Class & S-Class From Spring

Whoa amazing find..
still the front isnt clear enough..
But it looks like the Autobild rear lights where overdimensioned..
These look alot better:D
 
Re: Mercedes TecDay Feature: Safety Systems In The New E-Class & S-Class From Spring

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Official photos of the 2010 E-class are still a couple months away, but Mercedes is so excited about the safety technology set to appear on the new sedan (as well as on the refreshed 2010 S-class) that it flew us over for a briefing in Germany.

Hardware details of the E-class were scarce—torsional rigidity is up a claimed 30 percent and its coefficient of drag, at 0.25, will be better than the slippery Toyota Prius’s—but Mercedes continues to develop technologies that can outsmart the driver. Ulrich Mellinghoff, vice president in charge of safety at Mercedes-Benz, is happy to usher in the autonomous car: in his words, “cars that see, feel, and act for the driver.”

We’re not sure we share his elation. What’s next, cars that are incapable of exceeding the speed limit? Either way, here’s the new—and far less controversial—safety technology coming for 2010.

Attention Assist: Detecting Drowsy Drivers

Research indicates that as many as 30 percent of traffic accidents are related to drowsiness, and these are often the most catastrophic. Many automakers are pursuing systems that monitor the driver’s eye movement with a camera, but Mercedes isn’t convinced, claiming that these systems provide warnings too late, don’t work very well with drivers who wear glasses, and require additional hardware such as a camera and infrared lighting. That’s why the company has developed its own system, called Attention Assist, that’s based mostly on the driver’s steering behavior and requires only a more accurate steering-angle sensor.

To develop the system, Mercedes had more than 550 people drive some 600,000 test miles, both on actual roads and on driving simulators, many while hooked up to a skull cap full of electrodes to monitor brain activity. That way the level of drowsiness could actually be measured and then correlated to driving behavior. Attentive drivers tend to make small and nearly continuous steering corrections whereas sleepy operators make almost no corrections for a period of time while drifting off and then snap to with an overcorrecting jerk of the wheel.

In the first 20 to 30 minutes of driving, the system monitors the driver’s behavior to adapt itself to individual habits. When it determines you are too tired to drive safely, the system announces it’s time to take a break with an audible warning and a visual message that includes a coffee-cup icon.

Attention Assist will be standard equipment on the 2009 S-class and the new E-class. While we don’t doubt the system’s ability to accurately detect a drowsy driver, we do doubt that drivers will heed the warning. In our experience, we’re usually aware of our sleep deprivation, but we’d rather push on to our destination rather than pull off for a nap. And then there’s the Big Brother concern that the cops may be interested to know that a driver’s car even knew he or she was tired before causing an accident.

Pre-Safe: Now with Autonomous Panic Stops

“Pre-Safe” is Mercedes’ encompassing term for safety features that activate before a crash, such things as seatbelt pretensioning, automatic closing of the windows and sunroof, and even inflating the seat bolsters and repositioning the seat to place an occupant in a more favorable position to deal with the impending impact.

The latest wrinkle for Pre-Safe is its ability to perform a panic stop without any driver input. The system introduced on the current S-class for 2007 applies the brakes, but only with up to 40 percent of its maximum force.

Here’s a rundown of what happens before an impending crash:

At 2.6 seconds prior to an impact predicted by the system’s radar sensors, the driver gets an audible warning (this often triggers while aggressively weaving through busy traffic). The brakes are now preloaded to deliver maximum braking if the driver hits the pedal. At 1.6 seconds before a crash, the brakes are automatically applied at 40 percent (or roughly 0.4 g of deceleration), the seatbelts are pretensioned, windows and sunroof closed, and the seat bolsters inflated. At 0.6 second before impact, the system initiates a full panic stop to reduce the severity of the crash.

False activations of this panic-braking function would be an extreme no-no, which is why it waits to spring into action until just 0.6 second prior to impact. Mercedes engineers are 100-percent confident that a collision cannot be avoided at that point.

All the Rest

Mercedes’ research showed that high-beam headlights are only on about eight percent of the time. To bring better night visibility to all, the E- and S-class headlamps can automatically adjust to suit the conditions. Going a step further than current systems that simply alternate between low and high beams, these Hella headlamps adjust between the two extremes in small increments based on input from a camera to provide maximum lighting without blinding oncoming traffic. The system operates any time the turn-signal stalk is in the high-beam position.

Also new is a lane-departure warning system that uses a camera to detect if the car is deviating from its lane, similar to many other automakers’ systems. The system doesn’t actively pull the car back into its lane by applying the brakes as do some others, and thankfully the Benz’s warning is a vibration in the steering wheel and not the obnoxious beeping found on some other systems, such as Nissan and Infiniti’s.

The new cars will also have optional speed-limit detection, but it will only be available in Europe. It’s basically the same system found on the new BMW 7-series that reads speed limit signs and displays that information on the instrument cluster.

Another thing we don’t get here is the E-class’s new active hood that allows it to conform to European pedestrian-impact standards. When the three accelerometers in the front bumper determine that a person has been hit, the system electromagnetically releases a system of springs integrated into the hood’s hinges. That fires the hood upward by almost two inches, making more deformable crush space between the unlucky pedestrian and the solid surface of the engine. The system is fully reversible and simply requires the hood to be opened all the way and then shut to re-arm the springing mechanism.

2010 Mercedes-Benz E-class and S-class: Safety Technology - Car News/Latest News & Reviews/Car Shopping/Hot Lists/Reviews/Car and Driver - Car And Driver

M
 
Re: Mercedes TecDay Feature: Safety Systems In The New E-Class & S-Class From Spring

This feature is also availiable for most Volvo cars and i don't really get it! Why does anyone need his car to tell him when to take a break? Who dumb can a man be?
 


Having a tough passenger structure with front and rear crumple zones is nothing new today,
but the idea came from Bela Barenyi back in 1951. It was likely the most significant of his
2,500 automotive inventions.
PHOTO COURTESY FORD MOTOR CO.


Bela Barenyi's inventions saved countless lives

Safety designer preferred to stay behind scenes; finally inducted into Automotive Hall of Fame at age 90

By STEVEN REIVE | Las Vegas Review Journal

Placed end to end, you could likely line the number of patents he created all the way to Europe. There was the safety body shell. The crumple zone. The multipiece steering column.

Placed end to end, you could line the number of lives he has preserved through his passive safety inventions from here to Mars.
Could one man really be responsible for creating so much that was so beneficial for so many? Bela Barenyi did.

The sad part? You've probably never even heard his name.Known in engineering circles as the Father of Passive Safety, Barenyi was as unassuming in the public's eye as he was brilliant in the world of automotive technology. Barenyi always seemed to prefer the shadows.

While others in his field worked on more glamorous areas of safety and design, Barenyi worked on the cutting edge, toiling in the areas most could never even envision.

In many ways, Barenyi was capable of seeing a car crash happen before it actually happened, just the same way he saw safety as the next frontier in the auto industry.

Born in Austria just past the turn of the 20th century, Barenyi was someone with a remarkable story of courage and perseverance. As a boy he suffered an inflammation of the hip that resulted in a permanent body stiffness. That limitation as a child resulted in hours spent reading advanced technical literature.

Barenyi's father was a colonel in the Austro-Hungarian military and his mother came from one of the wealthiest families in Austria. Barenyi went on to study mechanical and electrical engineering in Vienna, before eventually landing his first job with Austria-Fiat Steyr and Adler automobile companies. After several successful engineering projects -- including the basic design and concept for the Volkswagen Beetle in 1925 -- Barenyi found his way to Daimler-Benz before his 33rd birthday.

At Daimler, Barenyi's world would open up like it had never before. He was given the free reign to create and it didn't take long to produce remarkable results. Barenyi developed the world's first comprehensive safety program geared toward the prevention of human injury as the result of a crash.

But out of his 2,500 inventions for the automobile industry, his idea in 1951 of dividing cars into three collision zones was the most significant. Barenyi believed in a rigid passenger cell enclosed by crumple zones, which would absorb the impact of a collision. There was a soft front section, a rigid passenger cell and a soft rear end.

To mass produce his design, Barenyi had to replace the rigid undercarriage with a floor plate. By 1959, his crumple zones were on every Daimler vehicle and would be copied throughout the industry. But that was only the beginning.

He created stronger frames and the idea for protection against side impacts. He created something as simple as the seat belt. In the end, after 33 years with Daimler, including his role as its head of advanced design, Barenyi was credited with creating the field of passive safety, acquiring patents in many different classifications including sleds, ships, airplanes and automobile. Many of today's standards in the automotive sector are based on his ideas. For all of this, Barenyi was eventually recognized by the Automotive Hall of Fame as one of the greatest contributors to public safety. Mercedes would also follow his lead.

In the years after his departure, Mercedes-Benz engineers pioneered numerous other safety innovations. All were developed using Barenyi's principles and his philosophy. Anti-lock brakes, traction control, electronic-stability program to prevent a skid or spin and electronic braking were all Mercedes-Benz inventions that put the automaker on the cutting edge of the industry.

But the ultimate compliment would come just before his death in 1997 at 90 years of age when his former employer publicly thanked him in an advertisement that ran around the world.

In a safety campaign used to tout the automaker's accomplishments, Mercedes-Benz featured Barenyi's image with a message. "No one in the world has given more thought to car safety than this man," it read.

Out of the shadows, a face emerged for the world to see. And everyone finally knew his name.

Steven Reive is a feature writer with Wheelbase Media. He can be reached on the Web at Wheelbase Media by using the contact link. Wheelbase supplies automotive news and features to newspapers across North America.

Bela Barenyi's inventions saved countless lives - Drive - ReviewJournal.com
 
First time hearing about him, any chance we can see that advertisement?
 
a lot cheaper here:

Amazon.com: Bela Barenyi: Pioneer of Passive Safety at Mercedes-Benz (9781933123028): Harry Niemann: Books
 

Mercedes-Benz

Mercedes-Benz Group AG is headquartered in Stuttgart, Germany. Established in 1926, Mercedes-Benz Group produces consumer luxury vehicles and light commercial vehicles badged as Mercedes-Benz, Mercedes-AMG, and Mercedes-Maybach. Its origin lies in Daimler-Motoren-Gesellschaft's 1901 Mercedes and Carl Benz's 1886 Benz Patent-Motorwagen, which is widely regarded as the first internal combustion engine in a self-propelled automobile. The slogan for the brand is "the best or nothing".
Official website: Mercedes-Benz (Global), Mercedes-Benz (USA)

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