Back when i was a kid, our “Weekly Reader” newspaper (which we read at school) had a story that i remember well. It concerned a experimental car, developed by RCA Labs (Princeton NJ), which would drive itself. i believe it was based on a magnetic strip embedded in the roadway, and ,being the 1960s, was an analog system, with servo motors controlling the steering. I recall that the system worked quite well-obviously it was never commercialized.
Am I remembering correctly?
History of the autonomous car, from a quick google:
It cites to the New York Times (article paywalled) and The Press-Courier (accessible).
I distinctly remember seeing a video (in the early 70’s?) of the ‘future’, showing a family driving by a traffic control tower on a lone highway, the father pushes the steering wheel forward out of the way…mom pulls a meal out of the glove box, and they all sit back and enjoy the ride.
Does this ring a bell to anyone?
Curiously, I ran into that video just the other day. Here it is.
You forgot the sing-a-long with the control tower. Also, the video was predicting the distant 70’s, but was made in 1956.
I think my old man was involved with that to-do in Nebraska. He was a professor there and also developed a radio-controlled tractor featured in “Better Farming” Winter 1958 edition.
Thanks for the info. We had this technology a long time ago-why wasn’t it adopted?
The Recession of the 70s.
we couldn’t even get fuel injection right at the time and you’re wondering why there were no self-driving cars?
there’s a huge difference between something working in a canned demo, and millions of those somethings working out there in the real world.
I’ve been in assembly plants which have had AGVs (automatically guided vehicles) mostly as parts transporters. they crawl along at 2.5 mph following a stripe of magnetic paint, and are programmed to stop immediately if a possible error state has been encountered.