Posted on 04/21/2012 8:21:41 AM PDT by Sub-Driver
New Law To Require 'Black Boxes' In All Cars
New Law Mandates Black Boxes In All Cars By 2015
By Bailey Johnson
A recently passed bill will require all cars to come equipped with "black boxes" that record vehicle data. These Event Data Recorders (EDR), similar to their airplane counterparts, will record data such as speed, brake force and electrical systems monitoring. The days of a car crash being one driver's word against another look to be history.
Senate Bill 1813 (known as Map-21) mandates that automakers install EDRs in all new vehicles starting in 2015.
(Excerpt) Read more at nation.foxnews.com ...
Awesome...1676 pages. The better to hide everything that’s coming, my dear.
-Rev 13:16-17
>BFD. People who can’t stand to not carry their cellphone everywhere worrying about having their vehicle tracked has to be some kind of satire attempt.
Forgetting my phone at home is only a minor inconvenience; I can’t really empathize with the “can’t live without it” mentality.
The next step is to have it plugged in and it report every time you exceeded the speed limit.
Hey Hey Hey ,,(P1077) we get seat belt warning buzzers for the REAR seat now ,, better belt in that gallon of milk or you’ll hear the buzzer.. and better yet ,, if you leave anything in the back seat (briefcase) ,, you get some kind of a warning if it’s unattended after the vehicle is turned off ... I guess ALL “stuff” will have to be on the floor to avoid the sensors. (P1063) redundant circuits for electronically controlled throttle ... so now we have 2 signals sources ,,, twice the chance of one fritzing out and leaving you stranded.
and MUCH MUCH MORE ... just started looking at this ...
Union built - of course!
So the question is; how much will someone charge to rip these things out?
It’s going to be just a couple of more lines of software in the already-existing computers. Any talk of a hammer or soldering iron being the means to “fix” that is simply foolishness.
I’m going to risk the flaming and say that I would agree to a data recorder that records just that: data, with no voice, as is necessary, I believe, in aircraft.
I think that the knowledge of just knowing it is there could and would save lives, and would render significant aid in determining laiability in accidents. (Have you ever been in one where this was an issue?)
The cost would admittedly be passed to the consumer. But so are rear view mirrors. But that added cost would be small to pay for the saving of several thousand lives lost per year that this technology otherwise would have saved.
Okay, I guess I’m ready. Have at me.
” Any talk of a hammer “
Hammers are good. It’s getting time for time hammers!
For older cars....find a shell of the black-box with a on-freq jammer, install it under the hood and drive the back roads.
If they have portable rf detection units, on the back roads, and you’re stopped, sorry occifer, the thing must have gone bad.
Good idea. But at the same time, let’s also try to elect all socialists out of office.
“The MSM cant get even the smallest details correct. Its not all cars, its starting in 2015 for new cars.”
Also, from what I gather, this bill has passed the Senate, but not the House. Nevertheless, the automakers are still going to implement OBD III in the not too distant future which will allow remote monitoring and the ability to shut off your engine if authorities request it. As for the data collection, they are already doing it. The issue now is do you, as the owner of the vehicle “own” the data, or can the courts require you to “incriminate yourself” by involuntarily “providing” your car’s data in the case of an accident.
“The next step is to have it plugged in and it report every time you exceeded the speed limit.”
We had a track day at Laguna Seca Raceway and one of the participants had rented a Corvette from Hertz. Just wonder what Hertz said about the data they got from the “reporting GPS.” Hours of going around a prescribed 2.3 mile closed course at speeds substantially above the state speed limit!! OOPSY!
The real reasons will be many people are thinking ahead and will be using home brewed fuels or at home fueling of natural gas and will be skipping on paying road taxes, so the Feds need a way to track your mileage for taxation.
My next vehicle will be a dual fuel with natural gas and I will have an at home compressor for it.
But if I had a black box, and since I am a master mechanic I would just find a way to shroud it with a Faraday cage, eliminate any possible way it could transmit info, even if I have to install a specific frequency jammer.
I have Datsuns. One time me and a few friends had a caravan of our 1960's era Datsun 2-seater roadsters coming back from a car show in San Diego back to San Francisco. My friend was quite proud of his roadster, which he races in vintage races at the track (we have 150hp engines on 2000 pound cars). He challenged me to a race on Hwy 101 in the California central valley. We accelerated up through all 5 gears until we were doing about 125 mph and then backed off to 90. (I handily beat him in all gears.) Another friend was closely following at 90. We all had CB radios and heard our friend say "oh crap!".
On our tail was a hwy patrol cruiser. As he pulled alongside we slowed to 70, but knew it was too late. He nodded his head to us, then jumped ahead and pulled over a regular sedan! Cool!
A black box in cars is going to take the fun out of driving.
I’ve got a ‘71 240z that I’ve given over to my son. That’s his driving to school car. May have to take it back....
Back in April both you posted an article on FR about the infamous Black Box. I just received my annual auto insurance renewal from State Farm for my 2004 vehicle which is due in January 2013.
My premium went up a chunk, even though I increased my deductible and have had no accidents for a long time. There is a note on the front that I can qualify for a substantial discount if I install On Star on my car. Even though I have drive only 78,000 miles in 8 years, it is nobody’s business how many I drive or how I drive. To make matters worse, my State Farm agent won his election as my Republican Texas State Representative this last November.
It has begun and he will be hearing from me tomorrow.
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