The National Highway Traffic Safety Administration finalized a new rule Monday that will require new passenger vehicles sold in the U.S. to include automatic emergency braking as standard equipment by ...
Helping to avoid or minimize potential rear-end collisions is the main benefit of Automatic Emergency Braking (AEB) for the average driver. While it has not yet been mandated as standard equipment on ...
Most drivers let several years pass before shopping for a new car. While shoppers aren’t kicking tires at dealerships, significant developments can emerge from the automotive technology landscape.
A federal rule that requires automatic emergency braking systems in cars and light trucks by 2029 could be a tough compliance hurdle for automakers but further the industry's efforts to use technology ...
It's not an exaggeration to say that cars are getting more advanced with each model year. From questionable infotainment growth to semi-autonomous driving technology, manufacturers are adding features ...
Safety features on new vehicles are progressively becoming more sophisticated, and one of the latest technologies on this front is intersection automatic emergency braking (IAEB). Intersections are ...
New research from the AAA automotive group assessed if AEB performed as expected and if functionality has improved when compared to older versions. Automatic emergency braking (AEB) systems are ...
In the not-too-distant future, automatic emergency braking will have to come standard on all new passenger vehicles in the United States, a requirement that the government says will save hundreds of ...
The Biden Administration has finalized a rule that mandates automatic emergency braking in all new vehicles by 2029. The compulsory rule will replace a voluntary agreement carmakers signed onto in ...
The federal government finalized a new safety standard requiring all light-duty vehicles to include AEB systems that stop a vehicle at high speeds when a collision is imminent. The federal government ...
A new report from AAA says newer systems prevent twice the number of collisions—and save lives. Regulators have ordered an expansion of the tech, but the auto industry says the upgrade won’t be easy.