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A Self-Driving Truck Drove Itself 2,800 Miles To Transport 40,000lbs Of Butter


The first project of sending an autonomous truck with full payload across the country – all the way from Tulare in California to Quakertown in Pennsylvania – has been completed successfully.

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The project was backed by a Silicon Valley startup. The truck traveled a total of 2,800 miles across the US and was carrying 40,000 lbs. of Land O’Lakes butter.

The project was commissioned by Plus.ai, from Cupertino, who also equipped the vehicle with a backup driver.

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The driver was tasked with taking control of the truck in case anything went wrong. A safety engineer was also there to monitor the project.

The co-founder and COO of Plus.ai, Shawn Kerrigan, said in his statement about the project: “We wanted to demonstrate the safety, reliability and maturity of our overall system.”

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Shawn said the truck was equipped with high-tech, cutting edge radar and lidar technology as well as cameras to help it maintain a safe distance from other vehicles or obstructions on the road, reported the Santa Cruz Sentinel.

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The truck was programmed to have mid-way breaks on the way, even though the driving was done autonomously.

Shawn also made it clear that the self-driving function of the truck operated seamlessly throughout the route and there were zero instances of the system becoming hanged.

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According to Shawn, Plus.ai has been operating freight trucks across the US for roughly a year now.

Chief supply officer at Land O’Lakes, Yone Dewberry, who was quite excited about the project, said: “To be able to address this peak demand with a fuel-and-cost-effective freight transport solution will be tremendously valuable to our business.”

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Science magazine Popular Mechanics said of the project: “The founders, a group of Stanford Ph.point 188 | D.point 190 | students, knew that trucking—which has been experiencing a labor shortage since 2003, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS)—is the primary method for shipping goods across the U.point 360 |

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S.point 2 | So they decided to apply their artificial intelligence know-how to long-haul trucking, building out the full-stack self-driving technology needed to make a cross country freight trip possible.point 168 | point 171 | 1

The Sentinel added: “Dan Ives, managing director of equity research for Wedbush Securities, predicts there will be quite a few autonomous freight-delivery pilots in 2020 and 2021, with the beginning of a commercial rollout in 2022… The timeline will depend on regulations, which vary state to state, he said.”

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Another similar experiment was done last year when a self-driving truck traveled 2,400 miles across America but in that experiment, the truck was empty.

California Department of Motor Vehicles told Popular Mechanics that so far 65 companies have a license for testing autonomous vehicles.

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According to the American management consulting firm McKinsey & Company, “Sixty-five percent of the nation’s consumable goods are trucked to market. With full autonomy, operating costs would decline by about 45 percent, saving the US for-hire trucking industry between $85 billion and $125 billion.”

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