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Toyota To Source Chips For Self-Driving Cars From Renesas

Toyota is partnering with Denso and Renesas to bring superior technology and expertise to the self-driving project and aims to accelerate the development of autonomous-driving vehicles and encourage early adoption.
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By Reuters

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1 mins read

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Published on November 1, 2017

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Highlights

  • Toyota plans to bring self-driving cars to market in 2020
  • Renesas will provide an electronic brain for the self-driving cars
  • A separate chip for automotive control will also be provided

Renesas Electronics Corp said on Tuesday it will provide semiconductors for self-driving cars that Japanese automaker Toyota Motor Corp plans to bring to market in 2020. Automakers are racing to be the first to market with commercially viable self-driving vehicles. Renesas said it will provide a chip to Toyota - the R-Car system-on-chip - that will serve as an "electronic brain" or as advanced driver-assistance systems. The company will provide a separate chip for automotive control.

Also Read: Is This The New Toyota SUV For India?

The first chip will provide "highly accurate intelligence on the vehicle's position within its environment" and will also make "real-time decisions on vehicle control and active safety maneuvers based on sensor data," Renesas said.

The second chip, called RH850, will "control driving, steering, and braking functions based on the judgments" made by the R-Car system-on-chip.

Fully self-driving vehicles are expected to hit the market in a limited form by around 2020. U.S. automakers General Motors Co and rival Ford Motor Co have both publicly stated that they aim to have fully self-driving cars on sale by 2021.

Also Read: Toyota To Test Self-Driving, Talking Cars By About 2020

Renesas' chips will be used with an engine control unit that will be provided by Denso Corp, Toyota's largest supplier.

"We are partnering with Denso and Renesas, who bring superior technology and expertise to this project, with the aim to accelerate the development of autonomous-driving vehicles and encourage early adoption," Ken Koibuchi, Executive General Manager at Toyota Motor Corporation, said in a statement.

(Reporting By Nick Carey; Editing by David Gregorio)

© Thomson Reuters 2017

(This story has not been edited by NDTV staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

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