Why The Dawn Of Drive By Wire Is Like Judgement Day For All Petrolheads

With many car manufacturers surging towards full automation of their vehicles, the detachment between driver and the car’s controls has been furthered by the introduction of ‘drive by wire’, yet more electrification of a once mechanical job
Why The Dawn Of Drive By Wire Is Like Judgement Day For All Petrolheads

The world of gaming has finally made its way into reality with this new technology known as ‘drive by wire’. With no direct mechanical connection between the controls, cars may no longer rely on linkages and can now be fully controlled through a detached steering wheel and pedals by the help of electric sensors and motors.

Effectively like a home racing game setup, mechanical linkages have been abandoned for the witchcraft of electricity. This saves weight, simplifies the entire car control into an ECU programme and allows for adjustment of control weights and response times with a simple change of coding. Infiniti has pioneered this technology in road cars with the Q50, which didn’t exactly get rave reviews on its launch. So what areas of the car can now be controlled this way?

Steering by wire

Why The Dawn Of Drive By Wire Is Like Judgement Day For All Petrolheads

This is probably the scariest one from my perspective. There is no steering column or rack, there’s simply the steering wheel, a set of wiring and then motors that turn each wheel. How the systems work is through a feedback loop which is essentially a safety net of a control system if anything should go wrong.

As you turn the steering wheel, an electrical sensor measures the steering angle and transmits that information down to the ECU which then sends that information off to electric motors which actuate each wheel at a pre-set angle in accordance with the steering input. A feedback sensor will keep note of the output of wheel direction that was produced by the steering input and will send a report back to the ECU telling it whether the electrics were in sync. If the output differed from the input, the feedback sensor will flag up a warning to the ECU and a warning light will alert the driver.

Brake by wire

Why The Dawn Of Drive By Wire Is Like Judgement Day For All Petrolheads

Braking is another area that may seem nerve-wracking to have no real mechanical linkage through a master cylinder and brake lines, but engineers have come up with a solution the same as with steering. An electrical position sensor will send information to the ECU including the angle of the brake pedal while being depressed. This information is then relayed to each brake calliper, which then closes its pads on the brake disc with a force equal to the feedback from the pedal.

Formula One has fully embraced brake by wire technology and it was immediately flagged up as a possible cause for Nico Rosberg’s collision with Lewis Hamilton at the Austrian Grand Prix. Having looked at the footage however, it was safe to say that the electronics weren’t to blame…

Throttle by wire

Why The Dawn Of Drive By Wire Is Like Judgement Day For All Petrolheads

Much the same as with the brake pedal, the throttle has no cable to the throttle body and instead has an electrical sensor measuring the distance the pedal has moved. It then equates that movement to a percentage of opening for the butterfly valve in the throttle body, thus allowing the desired amount of air to be pre-programmed to enter the engine.

Again, to stop unwanted amounts of throttle being applied by accident, a full feedback loop is present using a checking sensor to tell the ECU if there is a problem with the amount of throttle being electrically applied.

Park by wire

Why The Dawn Of Drive By Wire Is Like Judgement Day For All Petrolheads

When an automatic car is placed in Park, a pin is slid into position on the output shaft that locks the transmission in place. Rather than using a return spring to actuate the pin into place, an electric motor is used along with a sensor that makes sure the car is fully at rest before the car is placed into Park to avoid stripping the gearbox.

In conclusion

Why The Dawn Of Drive By Wire Is Like Judgement Day For All Petrolheads

Alarm bells should definitely be ringing for all you petrolheads out there. Manufacturers are trying their utmost to engineer fake ‘feedback’ through the steering and pedals through reaction forces back through your feet and restriction through the steering wheel to keep us lot happy. Companies like Porsche have only just managed to produce feel through an electric steering system but with Infiniti struggling to match that with the Q50 using drive by wire, it looks like the days of finger-tingling feedback may be numbered.

It is inevitable that drive by wire technology will dominate road cars in the next decade, along with automation and a switch to the Tesla school of thinking. As Spock once said, “the needs of the many outweigh the needs of the few,” so us car guys may just have to take a backseat. The age of mechanicals is ending; the time of the electric motor has just begun.

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Comments

V-Tech and EcoBoost kicked in yo

Throttle by wire is already common and fine. Brake by wire is a little sketchy though…

07/23/2016 - 16:57 |
2 | 2
Duellym

So sooner or later if you go though a deep puddle everything on the car breaks. That sounds like a good idea.

07/23/2016 - 17:00 |
0 | 4
Jia the Supra Fanboy

In reply to by Duellym

actually, it’s proven that a Tesla Model S (a fully electric car) can swim through a body of water where any ICE would fail due to engine flooding

07/23/2016 - 17:32 |
0 | 4
Grayson Warman (That Asian Guy)

what if there’s a power malfunction in the system ? Would that mean the whole system will become useless ? I mean that is literally driven by electricity ? I am actually a bit skeptical about this…

07/23/2016 - 17:22 |
0 | 4
Anonymous

You guys realize that most of their technology is better right? It’s cool to have opinions and I fancy Mechanical every thing. But fly by wire is almost always faster and better. Not to mention that this stuff has been in cars for about a decade so it’s also not new..and nor is it perfect yet.did I mention that I also have several cars that predate the 80s which I’m very fond of? You don’t have to hate the next something you don’t fully understand.

07/23/2016 - 18:08 |
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Griffin Mackenzie

I’m missing the middle steering wheel setup :(

07/23/2016 - 21:30 |
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Anonymous

You get a wire , he gets a wire, every body gets a wire baby

07/23/2016 - 22:15 |
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Anonymous

“The needs of the many outweigh the needs of the few” - Melania Trump

07/23/2016 - 22:34 |
6 | 4
Alexander Kieran Fitzpatrick 1

i have a buddy who installed this on a go kart learned how it worked unfortinatly its perfect,until the wiring dose bad and wait i cant steer ahh weve never had a mechanical steering brake

07/23/2016 - 22:45 |
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nandee

Btw, for the steering by wire, the same happened when they switched from hydraulic to electric power steering. Hydraulic is clearly superior if you look at feedback (and then, no power steering is superior to Hydraulic), yet nowadays nobody complains about electric power steering, apart from a few motoring journalist who daily drive hydraulic power steering cars, or cars without any power steering. Same happened at the throttle by wire thing.

So basically, we will rabble about it a bit, then it will be the norm, and when someone says “But back then when we only had electric steering assist, the feedback was better” everyone will say “Haha, no that sucked, this is better, because look at xy supercar car that has steering by wire, and has waaay better feedback than a 2016 Lada”. If you ask me, apart from ABS and a good hydraulic power steering and power brakes, you don’t really need any fancy electronics to drive a car, and honestly, you don’t even need these 3…

07/23/2016 - 23:29 |
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Anonymous

I’m sorry but my ecu has crashed before which meant I lost power steering and power. In this situation I’d have no steering, no power, no braking or in other words I’d be in a metal coffin. This would also make simple mods impossible since you’d need a clip to do anything

07/24/2016 - 00:00 |
0 | 0