- Ford engineer uses motor from Microsoft™ Xbox 360® game controller to create shift knob that vibrates when a driver should shift gears in a Ford Mustang Shelby GT500 with manual transmission
- 3D-printed prototype shift knob uses Ford’s OpenXC research platform to link devices to the car via Bluetooth®, and shares vehicle data from the on-board diagnostics port
- OpenXC provides an easy and inexpensive way to develop connected apps or to prototype new hardware features
DEARBORN, Mich., July 26, 2013 – An important part of the
total gaming experience for hardcore video gamers is getting physical
feedback through the controller as they keep their eyes on the screen.
It’s called haptic feedback. For drivers of performance cars like Ford
Mustang, feedback is just as important to understanding how the car is
behaving.
Rookie Ford engineer Zach Nelson has harnessed the power of
open-source hardware and software, 3D printing, wireless connectivity
and Microsoft™ Xbox 360® to bring haptic feedback
to a Ford Mustang Shelby GT500 through a manual shift knob that vibrates
at the optimal time to change gears.
“I wanted to create something that expands the car’s capabilities
and improves the experience for the driver,” said Nelson. “I decided to
use OpenXC to provide a new kind of feedback for the driver through the shift knob.”
Customization and personalization have been part of the Mustang
experience for nearly 50 years. The earliest ads for Mustang proclaimed
it as “The Car Designed to be Designed by You!” That spirit continues
today, whether following the traditional route of modifying the engines,
suspension and body or the modern approach to improving the driving
experience through software.
Ford’s open-source OpenXC software and hardware platform enables
developers to create apps that leverage the data available through a
car’s on-board diagnostics port.
Nelson, armed with a freshly minted mechanical engineering degree
from Massachusetts Institute of Technology, joined Ford in September
2012 through the company’s college graduate program. His first
assignment was at Ford’s Research and Innovation Center in Dearborn,
Mich., where he was introduced to OpenXC.
After learning how to build a mobile app, Nelson designed one that
could use real-time engine data, such as revolutions per minute, or rpm;
accelerator pedal position; and vehicle speed to calculate the optimum
shift points for the manual transmission. The data are transmitted from
the car’s OBD-II port to a tablet computer over a wireless Bluetooth®
connection using the OpenXC adapter. For testing and development
purposes, the tablet uses a USB cable to send the shift knob signals to
vibrate like a game controller or phone.
Nelson began by modifying a digital model of the shift knob from a
Ford Focus ST, turning it into a hollow shell with room for some extra
parts, and printing it with a MakerBot® Thing-O-Matic™.
He installed an Arduino controller with a mini-USB port, LED
display, colored LED lights and the vibration motor from a Microsoft
Xbox 360 game controller.
“The vibrating knob can be installed onto the stock shift lever,
and I’ve tested it on several vehicles including Mustang and Focus ST,”
Nelson says. “I decided to have a little fun with it and installed an
LED display on top that shows the gear position and colored lights that
glow from inside at night similar to the ambient lighting in Mustang.”
Moving the system to different vehicles only requires tuning some
calibrations in the app to match the torque curve of the car. By
monitoring the driver’s style through speed and the throttle pedal, the
app automatically adapts its control strategy to suit what it thinks the
driver is looking for. The app can be programmed to determine shift
points for best performance, comfort or fuel efficiency based on modes
selected by the driver.
For performance cars like Mustang, the potential for customization
using OpenXC signals that there is a secure future for both tuners and
developers alike.
“OpenXC is a great platform for developing connected apps and
aftermarket upgrades, or quickly prototyping features that could
eventually be incorporated directly into the vehicle,” Nelson says. “The
basic concept of my system could be integrated directly into the car,
and used on automatic-transmission vehicles with paddle shifters with
electric power steering.”
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