CAR NEWS

Toyota Cars To Get V2V/V2I Tech Starting In 2021

Apr 16, 2018

Summary
The good kind of talking car

Toyota says that starting in 2021, cars destined for the American marketplace will roll off the assembly line equipped with vehicle-to-vehicle and vehicle-to-infrastructure technology.

The announcement counts Toyota among the first automakers to commit to installing V2V and V2I across their model range. It's a decision the company says it hopes will encourage others to follow suit and spur more rapid development and deployment of self-driving vehicles.

According to Automotive News, Toyota has been building the necessary hardware into its Japanese market models since 2015.

In North America, only General Motors has so far made a similar commitment, having begun building V2V capability into the 2017 Cadillac CTS sedan about a year ago.

Back in 2016, former U.S. president Barack Obama tabled a proposal that would require automakers to build V2V and V2I tech into their vehicles, but suggested a four-year window following the enactment of legislation to give automakers time to comply.

The U.S. National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA) says it will not make a decision on implementing such a regulation before December of this year.

In North America, self-driving cars would communicate with each other and infrastructure in a 5.9 GHz radio communications spectrum that has otherwise largely gone unused.

 

Meet the Author

As a child, Chris spent most of his time playing with toy cars in his parents’ basement or making car sounds while riding his bicycle. Now he's an award-winning Algonquin College Journalism grad who has been playing with real cars that make their own noises since the early 2000s.