Skip to main content

A trio of autonomous Mercedes big rigs is hitting the road in Europe

Mercedes-Benz parent company Daimler is sending a convoy of three autonomous big rigs from its headquarters in Stuttgart, Germany, to Rotterdam, Holland, as part of the European Union-sponsored European Truck Platooning Challenge of 2016.

Based on the series-produced Actros model, the three trucks are equipped with Mercedes’ Highway Pilot Connect software, which relies on vehicle-to-vehicle (V2V) technology to let the rigs travel in what Daimler calls a platoon. Data about the road ahead gathered by the lead truck is constantly transferred to the two other trucks via a Wi-Fi connection, so each vehicle knows precisely when to accelerate, when to brake, and when to turn without requiring any human input. However, the driver must remain alert and focused on the road ahead.

Recommended Videos

The trucks in the platoon follow each other in 50-foot intervals, which boosts gas mileage by up to ten percent by reducing drag. CO2 emissions are also slashed by ten percent. More efficient trucks are good for the environment, and they’re beneficial for companies that make a living by transporting goods.

Mercedes-Benz Actros
Image used with permission by copyright holder

The three-truck platoon takes up markedly less space on the road than a trio of trucks driving independently. Mercedes explains that platooning makes roads safer, too, because the lead vehicle sends data to the trucks following it in as little as 0.1 seconds. In comparison, the average human driver takes 1.4 seconds to react to an emergency situation. A loaded truck needs a lot more space to come to a full stop than does the average passenger car, so Highway Pilot Connect has the potential to dramatically reduce the number of rear-end collisions that occur when a truck driver unexpectedly comes up on a traffic jam.

If everything goes according to plan, Mercedes’ autonomous convoy will arrive in Rotterdam on April 6. A timeframe for when the first fully autonomous commercial big rig will go on sale hasn’t been provided yet, but Mercedes firmly believes the self-driving truck will play a sizable role in the future of the transportation industry.

Ronan Glon
Ronan Glon is an American automotive and tech journalist based in southern France. As a long-time contributor to Digital…
Mercedes’ electric eSprinter isn’t just greener, it’s better
Front three quarter view of a 2024 Mercedes-Benz eSprinter electric van.

While best known for luxury cars, Mercedes-Benz is also a prolific maker of commercial vans. Since it first arrived in the U.S. in 2001, the Mercedes-Benz Sprinter has become a favorite of both delivery fleets and camping enthusiasts. And with Mercedes kicking its electrification plans into high gear, we’re finally getting an all-electric Sprinter van.

The 2024 Mercedes-Benz eSprinter is an updated version of a model Mercedes was already selling in Europe but was considered unsuitable for the U.S. because of its limited driving range. The updated eSprinter addresses that with a bigger battery pack and features a reengineered electric motor and other components that allow it to be built more easily alongside conventional vans. That’s happening at Mercedes’ factory in North Charleston, South Carolina, which will begin supplying electric vans to customers in the U.S. later this year.

Read more
Part plug-in, part dragster, the Mercedes-AMG GLC63 is an SUV of many faces
Front three quarter view of the 2025 Mercedes-AMG GLC63 S E Performance.

When it comes to electrifying performance cars, Mercedes-Benz believes there’s no silver bullet.

The automaker’s Mercedes-AMG performance division has already engineered EVs like the AMG EQE SUV and the S63 AMG E Performance sedan, a plug-in hybrid that pairs electric assist with one of the brand’s traditional V8 engines. AMG’s latest electrified model — a hot-rodded version of the GLC-Class compact crossover SUV and a rival to performance SUVs like the BMW X3 M and Porsche Macan — sits somewhere in between those extremes.

Read more
How do you crash-test an EV with an 871-pound battery? Mercedes showed us
Crash test with Mercedes-Benz EQS SUV and EQA electric cars.

A flash of light, a big bang, and it’s over. Two SUVs lie askew on a patch of concrete, a debris field scattered between them. They’ve just been in a head-on collision, the moment captured by high-speed cameras aided by blindingly bright lights. That’s what a successful day looks like at the Mercedes-Benz crash-test lab in Sindelfingen, Germany.

While spectacular and jarring, crash-tests aren’t special. Mercedes averages three per day at this facility, giving engineers plenty of data from onboard sensors and crash-test dummies to analyze behind closed doors. But this test was different.

Read more