Hyundai’s Elevate Concept Uses Legs and Wheels to Go Anywhere

https://www.wired.com/story/hyundai-walking-car-elevate-concept-ces


Like the sushirrito and the Rollie Eggmaster, the wheel is the certified product of the human brain, unmatched in ingenuity by eons of evolution.

Now, after 5,000 years of transportation advances built on the ability to roll from A to B, Hyundai has decided it’s time to move on. Today at CES in Las Vegas, the automaker fleshed out the details on an insect-like concept car that isn’t limited by its wheels. This thing also has legs, which allow it to go where there are no roads, by trekking or climbing over difficult terrain, fording rivers, clambering over crumbled concrete, or even climbing stairs.

In this city without restraint, CES is a safe space to showcase outrageous concepts unlikely to make it to production. But Hyundai has thought through a business case for the machine it’s calling Elevate, or the Ultimate Mobility Vehicle (how about the ummmm… v?). It pitches the blend of car, robot, and Mars rover as the ideal machine for first responders. While a car or truck would get stumped at the edge of a debris field of broken buildings, for example, the Elevate can just clamber on over, to the heart of the problem, instead of leaving fire fighters or whoever else to trek in on foot. Hyundai says with a modular platform, the body atop the walking wheels could be swapped out for different applications. It also shows a taxi concept that can climb entrance steps to a building, to allow wheelchair users to roll in and out easily.

The platform itself puts the four wheels on the ends of robot legs with five degrees of freedom (meaning they can move in just about any direction). Propulsion comes from electric motors mounted inside each wheel hub, like on the Mars Curiosity Rover.

When the legs are folded under the vehicle, the Elevate can travel at highway speeds, almost resembling a normal car. But it looks cleverest, and scariest, when it rises up to full height, using the wheels as feet. It can replicate the walking patterns of both mammals and reptiles, so it can stride across most terrains confidently, even snow and ice, with the wheels turned sideways as non-slip pads. “Imagine a car stranded in a snow ditch 10 feet off the highway being able to walk or climb back to the road,” says David Byron, design manager at Sundberg-Ferar, the Detroit based design studio that worked with Hyundai to develop the concept.

Hyundai says with a modular platform, the body atop the walking wheels could be swapped out for different applications.

Hyundai

Concept is the key word. Hyundai is vague on whether this thing would be autonomous or require a human at the controls, but it’s worth noting just how hard moving a robot through the world really is. As Boston Dynamics CEO Marc Raibert said at last year’s WIRED25 conference, the robot shop’s viral videos—starring dancing quadrupeds and parkour-ing humanoids—showcase the rare successful attempts, not the many screw ups they took along the way. And although the Curiosity Rover has lasted nearly three times its designed lifespan, on a hostile alien planet, it’s not a great model for a commuter machine: It has covered just 12 miles in six years.

If the promised revolution in mobility due to autonomous, electric, connected cars (and scooters) actually arrives, it will bring changes in the way that we use vehicles in cities. So although this concept it outlandish, it doesn’t hurt to start thinking about new ways to build vehicles, and maybe even reinvent the wheel.

It’s a better idea, anyway, than trying to cook eggs in a tube.


via Wired Top Stories http://bit.ly/2uc60ci

January 7, 2019 at 05:06PM

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