Toyota connects windscreen wipers to weather channel

A project in Japan sees Toyota teaming up with a weather channel, using connected windscreen wipers to deliver more accurate forecasts.

Connected windscreen wipers

Your car’s windscreen wipers could soon be used to deliver more accurate weather forecasts.

Using data from connected cars, meteorologists could pinpoint localised weather conditions, helping to create a broader picture across the entire country.

This could be used to warn drivers of hazardous conditions and to enable weather-related speed restrictions to improve road safety.

In Japan, a project between Toyota and Weathernews involves the monitoring of windscreen wipers used in connected cars.

“It’s a brilliantly simple idea,” claims Toyota. Drivers activate their wipers in response to rain, and the speed of the wipe tends to correspond with the severity of the downpour.

A couple of cars using their wipers could be a case of screen washing. If numerous people activate their wipers, the reason is likely to be meteorological.

Toyota windscreen wiper

Toyota says standard rain cloud radar systems cannot always detect light showers, so its connected vehicles have the potential to identify weather that might otherwise go undetected.

Working in conjunction with the existing Weathernews observation network, which is spread across 13,000 locations, the connected wipers add another layer of information.

Used correctly, this data could reduce accidents and prepare drivers for deteriorating conditions. In Japan, there are four times as many motorway accidents in the rain as there are on sunny days.

The connected wipers can also communicate in other ways. Nearly all Toyota passenger cars launched since 2018 are equipped with an on-board data communication module.

Using Car2Car technology, cars can warn other cars about weather and hazardous driving conditions.

Say, for example, a number of cars detect ice on a bend. This information can be relayed to the cars approaching the corner, preparing the driver for danger.

Similarly, if a number of connected cars are queuing in traffic, the data can be used to divert other motorists away from the congestion.

Smart windscreen wipers won’t be able to improve the weather, but they might tell you when you need to pack an umbrella.

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Gavin Braithwaite-Smith
Gavin Braithwaite-Smithhttp://www.petrolblog.com
Writer with a penchant for #FrenchTat. Owns 15 vehicles of varying degrees of terribleness. Also doing a passable impression of Cousin Eddie in an Italian-German beige motorhome. Doesn't get out much.

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