China’s answer to Google has unveiled the Jidu Robo-1 concept, a driverless car planned to go into production in 2023 as part of an ambitious move to take on Tesla.
The Jidu Robo-1 would become the first car to be released from Jidu Auto, a joint venture formed in January 2021 between Chinese internet firm Baidu and Volvo-owning Chinese carmaker Geely.
The Robo-1 SUV features a Level 4 autonomous driving system, which can operate the car without human interaction – though is one step below fully automated capability.
Distinctive exterior features include two 180-degree field-of-view lidar laser detection cameras, which pop out of the front guards, forming a total of a dozen high-definition autonomous driving cameras positioned around the vehicle.
The striking, pillar-less concept vehicle features dihedral doors up front and rear-hinged ‘coach’ handle-less doors at the back, while other stand-out design elements include Tetris-style pixel headlights and tail-lights with intelligently controlled, variable LED lighting.
A full-length panoramic roof blends into a rear design incorporating an electrically operated rear spoiler that rises and falls depending on vehicle speed to either reduce drag or improve downforce.
Inside, a minimalist, yet dramatic, cabin brings a full-width digital display with claimed high-resolution graphics and fast frame rate, and includes games to help entertain front occupants – including the ‘driver’ when not steering the car.
When the driver wants or needs to take control, a retractable, U-shaped steering wheel comes into play – following the trend for yoke-style tillers.
There’s an advanced audio system promising cinematic-quality sound, while occupants can use an artificially-intelligent voice command system to activate functions.
All four seating positions use lightweight, 'spaceship-inspired' zero-gravity seats, while the wraparound cabin design incorporates variable ambient lighting.
The Robo-1 production car will reportedly be 90 per cent faithful to the concept vehicle.
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