What Is It?
Electro-hydraulic braking unit (EHB) from TRW Automotive (Warren, MI). Its
the first step toward brake-by-wire systems that replace the mechanical connection
between the brake pedal and foundation brakes. In effect it is a by-wire unit
with hydraulic redundancy.
How Does It Work?
The so-called Brake Pedal Unit (BPU) contains the hydraulic fluid reservoir,
pedal damping and hydrostatic fail-safe unit. It measure the pedals position,
and calculates the amount of braking needed at the wheels. The Electro-Hydraulic
Control Unit (EHCU) contains a high-pressure accumulator that stores the energy
generated by the EHCU, and distributes it to the wheels individually, based
on demand.
Why Is It An Advantage?
TRW says the EHB combines the ability to provide the optimum brake pressure
at each wheel with the capacity to supply this pressure more quickly than a
conventional hydraulic braking system. This results in reduced stopping distances.
Pedal effort no longer affects brake performancethat is, pushing harder
doesnt get you more braking force. Thats because the sensors in
the BPU determine the severity of the stop by how quickly the brakes are applied,
not by how far the pedal is pushed. This allows the OEM to easily tailor pedal
feel to the vehicle type and driver demographic through software changes. And
packaging is enhanced by the integrated design.
What Else Is Unique?
TRW claims EHB can easily be blended with regenerative braking systems, like
Hydraulic Launch Assist, to give the driver a consistent pedal feel independent
of the type or amount of braking (HLA torque or friction) being used. It also
can be integrated with ABS and traction control, vehicle stability systems,
panic brake assistance, and Adaptive Cruise Control in whole or in part.
Will It Be Used?
TRW expects EHB will be the centerpiece for high-line European manufacturers
as they introduce collision avoidance systems on their flagship cars. The units
will be integrated with the Active Cruise Control units forward-looking
sensors and active restraint system, like TRWs Active Control Retractor
for seatbelts to provide even greater occupant safety. As OEMs become even more
concerned about packaging more stuff into the same spaceand costs continue
to dropTRW says the units will move into mid-size vehicles, and platforms
used to produce multiple vehicle types.