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| Home > News and Events > Press Room > 2003 > Press Release |
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Press ReleaseFault Insertion Adds Reality to Virtual Vehicle HIL Tests Montreal, Canada and Staffordshire, United Kingdom, August 20, 2003 - Opal-RT Technologies and add2 Ltd. today announced that the two companies have joined forces to enhance the ability of testing the stability of in-vehicle electronic control units (ECU) to improve controller reliability and vehicle safety. The relationship will bring together the fault insertion products developed by add2 Ltd. with RT-LAB Engineering Simulators from Opal-RT Technologies to test real-world in-vehicle scenarios in virtual vehicle Hardware-In-the-Loop tests.
Instead of waiting for the test vehicle in order to run long, laborious road tests, ECU designers can now develop and prototype their controllers with a virtual test vehicle, "driving" it through extensive simulated test circuits, while calibrating and optimizing the ECU without leaving the lab. This allows them to deliver the finished product in a fraction of the time and cost it used to take just three or four years ago. But what if a fault should occur in the vehicle's electrical system? How does the ECU behave, and how does it ensure the safety of the driver and passengers? Let's say, the yaw sensor shorts to ground as the vehicle makes a left turn at 100 km/hr - is the vehicle still stable? Or what is the chain effect when a steering angle sensor fails but the signal is transmitted to three other ECUs? These types of real-world scenarios can now be tested using the range of Fault Insertion products from add2 Ltd., integrated with RT-LAB Engineering Simulators from Opal-RT Technologies. Initially developed for automatic fault testing of ECUs, to test ECU response to the application of a variety of electrical faults to the input and output lines, the Fault-Insertion Breakout Box (FIBB) has now been integrated with the RT-LAB Simulator so that the ECU developer can gain a much better understanding of the effect of electrical faults on the dynamic behavior of the controller/component subsystem, or even the entire vehicle. "This project was largely driven by one of our customers, who needed to perform electrical fault simulation on one of their vehicle stability control ECUs", said Wensi Jin, Automotive Product Manager for Opal-RT Technologies in Michigan. "However, we quickly realized that this system had potential as an off-the-shelf product for a broader market. Basically, anyone who needs to perform rigorous fault tests on any or all in-vehicle controllers will find this product invaluable."
It can apply this on any combination of up to 63 I/O lines on a single FIBB, and multiple FIBBs can be added - new versions of the FIBB now offer virtually unlimited I/O and enhanced functions including self-test. "This has been a real success story for us." said Brett Dowen, Managing Director of add2 in the UK. "This customer probably saved around 50% of their costs and a huge amount of time by using our FIBB system in conjunction with Opal-RT I'm convinced that other ECU manufacturers will realize the benefits of this product and will incorporate it into their arsenal of control, testing and prototyping tools." About Opal-RT Technologies Inc. About RT-LAB About add2 Ltd.
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