ZF showed off its portfolio of electrified and automated technologies for cars and trucks.  -  Photo: ZF

ZF showed off its portfolio of electrified and automated technologies for cars and trucks.

Photo: ZF

ZF’s vision of the commercial truck of the future is automated, connected, and electrified, and it shared its latest advancements toward what it calls its Next-Generation Mobility strategy during its Global Technology Day July 19 at its testing facility in Jeversen, Germany.

With its 2020 purchase of Wabco and the melding of that with its existing commercial-vehicle operation into the Commercial Vehicle Solutions division earlier this year, ZF said it’s now the largest supplier with the broadest portfolio to the commercial vehicle industry.

With both commercial vehicle and passenger-car businesses, as well as a global footprint, ZF said it can transfer technologies and competencies across vehicle segments in areas such as automation and electric drivetrains. That means even if the technologies showcased here aren’t yet available in North America, eventually they may be.

Rehm said that ZF's commercial vehicle division “can quickly take over innovations in e-mobility from passenger cars into the truck.”  -  Photo: Screen capture from ZF virtual press conference

Rehm said that ZF's commercial vehicle division “can quickly take over innovations in e-mobility from passenger cars into the truck.”

Photo: Screen capture from ZF virtual press conference

Steer by Wire Marks Progress on Path to Self-Driving Trucks

An example of that is ZF’s latest announcement for its passenger car offerings, a new electric steer-by-wire system that will be launched by a major global automaker within the next year.

Steer-by-wire technology transmits driver commands to the steering system entirely through electrical signals, removing the mechanical link between the steering wheel and front axle.

“ZF’s smart by-wire systems end the era of mechanical connections and enable a new era of vehicle control,” said ZF CEO Wolf-Henning Scheider. “ZF’s steer-by-wire technology enables new safety and comfort features, like autonomous emergency evasive maneuvers or parking in very confined spaces. It marks a breakthrough on the way to fully self-driving cars and trucks by adding new design and engineering freedom.

“ZF’s new steer-by-wire technology is an important precondition for advanced automation in passenger cars and, true to our ‘develop once, deploy anywhere’ guiding philosophy, will also be applied to commercial vehicle automation,” added Scheider.

By-wire is the perfect fit for future electric and automated vehicles, according to ZF, which also offers brake-by-wire with Integrated Brake Control and electronically controlled active suspensions.

With by-wire technologies, the amount of steering assist or brake torque can be tuned to mimic the typical feel that drivers expect but can also be instantly adjusted to enhance brake force to reduce stopping distances or steer around an obstacle more expertly than drivers can do themselves.

In response to a reporter’s question, officials noted that steer-by-wire eventually would replace the company’s ReAx electric steering assist, which currently is being tested for autonomous-truck applications.

“Thanks to our expertise with supercomputers and smart actuators… we are in a unique position to control all dimensions of the driving dynamics of a car or a truck,” Scheider told reporters. “We can network all these components with each other and control them electronically. It’s a new world.”

A step in that direction on the commercial vehicle side is ZF’s EPS, electronic power steering, which “is an important prerequisite for future driving systems and a higher degree of automation,” said Wilhelm Rehm, head of ZF’s Commercial Vehicles Solutions division.

Next-Generation eMobility for Commercial Vehicles

Rehm also said that the CV division “can quickly take over innovations in e-mobility from passenger cars into the truck.”

Scheider explained that ZF’s commercial vehicle business benefits from the economies of scale of its passenger-car sector. “It’s clear to us at ZF that the future of mobility is going to be electric, for cars and trucks,” he told reporters.

Specific to commercial vehicles, ZF unveiled a new integrated, modular electric driveline, CeTrax 2, for vehicles up to 44 tons gross vehicle weight. The new system combines a favorable power-to-weight ratio and a highly integrated, compact design. This enables a high, sustained output of 360 kW and improved efficiency through powershift gear changes, according to the company.

It also features high-end technologies such as an innovative cooling system and a silicon carbide-based inverter, adapted from ZF’s passenger car expertise. Production with a global vehicle manufacturer will start next year.

The CeTrax 2 electric drive for trucks features high-end technologies such as an innovative cooling system and a silicon carbide-based inverter, adapted from ZF’s passenger car expertise.  -  Photo: ZF

The CeTrax 2 electric drive for trucks features high-end technologies such as an innovative cooling system and a silicon carbide-based inverter, adapted from ZF’s passenger car expertise.

Photo: ZF

A new electric power take-off, eWorkX, was announced a few weeks ago.

ZF officials also said the company can take a holistic approach to sustainability by combining smart technologies and control systems for both truck and trailer. Rehm said the company is focusing on benefits that can be achieved by looking at the tractor and trailer as a whole. Improved efficiency yields improve fuel economy now, and in the future can help extend the range of electric trucks.

“By integrating our individual solutions into a complete system even across trucks and trailers,” Rehm said, the company can offer increased efficiency, safety and security.

Equipping innovation trucks and semi-trailers with a suite of its latest safety and efficiency technologies, ZF is also demonstrating how its complete vehicle approach represents a significant step towards the industry aim of ‘zero accidents’ and next level efficiency.

End-to-End Automated Commercial Vehicle Solutions

ZF is also working on commercial vehicle automation with the next generations of its Adopt (Autonomous Driving Open Platform Technology) platform. Adopt translates driving instructions from Virtual Driver applications (Autonomous Driving Artificial Intelligence) to real vehicle motion commands by enabling the control of all the relevant vehicle actuation systems.

Adopt 2.0 focuses on low-speed yard automation applications up to 20 km/h. In addition, ZF demonstrated ADOPT 3.0, which enables hub-to-hub highway applications at speeds up to 80 km/h.

Adopt 2.0 focuses on automating low-speed yard applications up to 20 kph, or about 12 mph.  -  Photo: ZF

Adopt 2.0 focuses on automating low-speed yard applications up to 20 kph, or about 12 mph.

Photo: ZF

Company officials emphasized the ever-increasing importance of computers and software in its business. At the Global Technology Day, the company unveiled Scalar, a digital solutions platform for commercial vehicle fleets that enables efficient Transport-as-a-Service. It is a fully automated, artificial-intelligence-based planning, routing and dispatching solution.

ZF Scalar combines and connects technologies on board commercial vehicles and third-party systems with artificial intelligence. The platform will help fleet operators increase operational efficiency, sustainability, planning reliability, and cargo and passenger safety.

About the author
Deborah Lockridge

Deborah Lockridge

Editor and Associate Publisher

Reporting on trucking since 1990, Deborah is known for her award-winning magazine editorials and in-depth features on diverse issues, from the driver shortage to maintenance to rapidly changing technology.

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