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Tech

5G being used in new generation of driverless cars

Vodafone installing latest kit at Horiba MIRA's vast vehicle test site in central England

Hands-free: An autonomous Range Rover Sport being tested at Horiba MIRA(Image: Birmingham Mail)

A global research centre is using 5G technology to help the next generation of vehicles talk to each other.

Horiba MIRA – the Motor Industry Research Association – is bringing in Vodafone to install the latest kit at its º£½ÇÊÓÆµ headquarters between Hinckley and Nuneaton in west Leicestershire.

The MIRA site has been leading the way in helping car manufactures develop driverless and autonomous vehicle designs for years, working with the likes of Ford, Jaguar Land Rover and Tata Motors on self-driving cars which have already been trialled on º£½ÇÊÓÆµ streets.

The business has plans to build a huge £26 million track in the Leicestershire countryside to test driverless cars at speeds of up to 155mph – which could eventually support around 1,800 jobs. The 1.2 million sq ft track would be half a mile long with a 330 yard wide circular area at the top.

As well as working on vehicles which drive themselves, MIRA is also working on cars, lorries and buses that share information with one another and with points along roads such as traffic lights and pedestrian crossings.

A MIRA spokesman said: “5G connectivity capability is a game changer to the safety, efficiency and convenience of driverless vehicles.”

MIRA’s investment will see Vodafone deploy and build a 4G and 5G mobile private network at the site.

It will help improve the site’s self-driving capabilities, which include work on the rising cybersecurity threats facing driverless technologies as well as the use of artificial intelligence in unmanned military vehicles.