Ford reveals Curve Control Technology - debut in all-new 2011 Ford Explorer

The death of the power slide

Ford has unveiled Curve Control Technology (CCT), a standard feature on the 2011 Explorer.

Designed to help prevent rollover accidents, CCT senses when a driver is taking a corner too quickly. When this occurs, the system will intervene and cut engine power. If the vehicle is still traveling too fast, CCT will apply the brakes to slow the vehicle by 10 mph in one second.

Effective on dry or wet pavement, the system works by "measuring how quickly the vehicle is turning and comparing that with how quickly the driver is trying to turn."  To do this, CCT calculates inputs from various sensors (which measure roll rate, yaw rate, lateral acceleration, wheel speed and steering wheel angle) 100 times a second.

Approximately 50,000 accidents occur every year, in the U.S., because drivers take corners too fast. To help reduce the risk, Ford will offer CCT on 90% of their North American crossover, truck, and SUV lineup by 2015.

According to Sue Cischke, Ford group vice president of Sustainability, Environment and Safety Engineering, "Too many accidents stem from drivers misjudging their speed going into curves and freeway off- and on-ramps. Ford's Curve Control technology senses a potentially dangerous situation and reduces power and applies brakes more quickly than most drivers can react on their own."

Check out the press release for additional information.

Source: Ford

FORD INTRODUCES NEW CURVE CONTROL TECHNOLOGY TO HELP PROTECT AGAINST CRASHES ON CURVES

  • Ford is pioneering the next frontier of safety with crash-avoidance innovations such as Curve Control, which launches on the all-new 2011 Ford Explorer and rolls out to 90 percent of Ford's North American crossovers, sport utilities, trucks and vans by 2015
  • Curve Control is designed to help drivers maintain control of their vehicle when taking a curve too quickly, a situation found to contribute to approximately 50,000 crashes on curves each year in the U.S. alone
  • Curve Control senses when a vehicle is entering a curve too quickly, and can apply four-wheel smart braking to reduce vehicle speed by up to 10 mph in approximately one second and help drivers follow their intended path
  • The system will come standard on the all-new 2011 Ford Explorer, part of a suite of safety technologies on the reinvented SUV, including the first inflatable rear seat belt on the market

DEARBORN, Mich., June 28, 2010 - Ford Motor Company today introduced a new innovation - Curve Control - designed to help drivers maintain control of their vehicles when taking a curve too quickly.

Curve Control debuts as standard equipment on the all-new 2011 Ford Explorer going into production later this year, and will be offered on 90 percent of the company's North American crossovers, sport utilities, trucks and vans by 2015.

The technology senses when a driver is taking a curve too quickly - a situation found to contribute to about 50,000 crashes each year in the U.S. - and rapidly reduces engine torque and can apply four-wheel braking, slowing the vehicle by up to 10 mph in about one second.

"Too many accidents stem from drivers misjudging their speed going into curves and freeway off- and on-ramps," said Sue Cischke, Ford group vice president of Sustainability, Environment and Safety Engineering. "Ford's Curve Control technology senses a potentially dangerous situation and reduces power and applies brakes more quickly than most drivers can react on their own."

Curve Control is effective on dry or wet pavement, and is expected to be particularly useful when drivers are entering or exiting freeway on- or off-ramps with too much speed. When a vehicle enters a curve too fast, the system responds to the driver's steering input by rapidly reducing torque and increasing brake pressure to help keep the vehicle under control.

The patent-pending system works by measuring how quickly the vehicle is turning and comparing that with how quickly the driver is trying to turn. When the vehicle is not turning as much as the driver is steering - also known as "pushing" - Curve Control activates. The system applies the precise amount of braking required on each wheel to enhance the individual wheel braking of the traditional stability control system.

Based on Ford's exclusive AdvanceTrac® with RSC® (Roll Stability ControlTM), Curve Control uses sensors to measure roll rate, yaw rate, lateral acceleration, wheel speed and steering wheel angle, and runs calculations based on those inputs 100 times every second.

"Ford is developing technologies such as Curve Control and radar-based collision warning systems that can prevent crashes from happening in the first place," said Paul Mascarenas, Ford vice president of Engineering for Global Product Development. "These new active systems designed to prevent accidents are the perfect complement for Ford's leading passive safety systems - such as advanced airbags and high-strength vehicle structures - that protect occupants when a crash is inevitable."
Curve Control is one of several new driver assist and safety technologies to be offered on the all-new Explorer. Other technologies include next-generation adaptive cruise control and collision warning with brake support, state-of-the-art pressure-based airbag technology, the industry's first inflatable rear seat belts and intelligent four-wheel-drive terrain management system.

Real-world benefits
Ford safety researchers found through analysis of government crash data that approximately 50,000 crashes annually in the U.S. involve driving too fast on a curve.

According to a study by the Insurance Institute for Highway Safety, freeway ramps "are the sites of far more crashes per miles driven than other segments of interstate highways." In that 2004 study of more than 1,100 urban freeway interchange crashes, vehicle speed was noted as a "primary crash contributor." About half of those interchange crashes occurred when at-fault drivers were in the process of exiting interstates and another 36 percent occurred when drivers were entering interstates.

"While we strongly encourage our customers to drive at safe speeds, systems such as Curve Control can be useful in unexpected situations," said Ali Jammoul, Ford chief engineer, Chassis Systems.

Ford's safety leadership record continues to grow
Ford has been awarded more five-star U.S. government ratings and Top Safety Picks from the Insurance Institute for Highway Safety than any other automaker.

In 2009 Ford introduced radar-enabled adaptive cruise control and collision warning with brake support, and BLIS® (Blind Spot Information System) with cross-traffic alert. These technologies - introduced on the new Ford Taurus and Fusion - help drivers avoid potentially dangerous crash situations by using radar to detect the relative position of other vehicles and warning the driver with a combination of visual and audio alerts.

On the 2002 Explorer, Ford launched the industry's first rollover-activated side curtain airbags - called Safety Canopy® - as well as Roll Stability Control technology that goes beyond traditional stability control systems by measuring the vehicle's roll rate to enhance vehicle stability.

Ford also introduced some of the industry's first pressure-based airbag technologies that help deploy side airbags up to 30 percent faster on the 2009 F-150 and 2010 Taurus.

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 mohaon mohaon
its good to know that Ford Explorer wont flip the next curve. two of my closest friends had explorer and both flipped their cars on high way but that was due to bad tires that ford installed into the cars
June 29, 2010 11:35 am
 blaksabb blaksabb
because it's never the driver's fault...
June 29, 2010 11:53 am
 6spdaudi 6spdaudi
Were the tires over- or underinflated? Were they properly rotated? Was the vehicle overloaded? Was the vehicle traveling the posted speed limit? Small details
June 29, 2010 11:56 am
 Kepex Kepex
Hmm yet another automatic system that keeps the dangerous and idiotic drivers on the road instead of the ditch where they belong.
June 29, 2010 2:32 pm
 TheAlchemist TheAlchemist
well put.
June 29, 2010 9:06 pm
 Bu3abood Bu3abood
or was it a ford :P
June 29, 2010 2:59 pm
 BackInTheRealWorld BackInTheRealWorld
Ummm, how is this different from stability control, DSC, EBD, call it what you will, that is mandatory by law in all new vehicles in about 5 months time if I'm not mistaken? Yes that means even for the $10k Hyundai Accent, I believe the Mazda 2 even has it now.
June 29, 2010 6:59 pm
 benz_man benz_man
The difference is in the software. I'd assume 90% of this new "system" is just code because it piggybacks all the DSC inputs anyway.
June 29, 2010 10:02 pm
 p2c p2c
Those cars roll over just because of basic physic laws... They just should not exist... Never saw an Elephant running faster than a leopard... funily the leopard handles better in curves ... Nevertheless, they keep on manufacturing these against nature kind of things
June 30, 2010 12:40 am
 m3 m3
ahh that'great system and that's like ESP the same princple
June 30, 2010 1:46 am