about ASL360
ASL360 is the world's first ever stand-alone system for industrial vehicles offering the operator a bird's eye real-time view of the vehicle and its surroundings. The ASL360 surround view system synthesises a bird's eye image of the vehicle using multiple ultrawide-angle cameras mounted on the front, sides and rear of the vehicle. Ordinarily, the fisheye distortion renders the views from such cameras unusable, but ASL360 deploys heavy duty signal processing to produce usable geometry.
Designed to assist low-speed manoeuvrability and security, the screen displays the view as if from above the vehicle. The system can be used with other existing cameras due to its extensive user-configurable User Interface. The basic version interfaces up to six cameras to provide surround and local side views, whilst the enhanced version interfaces up to 12 cameras.
Custom options are available to interface the vehicle's CAN bus and to perform numerous Machine Vision functions, such as video conditioning for low-light or bright sky, vehicle speed calculation, camera soiling, ground feature tracking, obstacle detection, hoist interlocks, trailer/implement hitching.
All vehicles have blind spots - areas around the vehicle that are obscured to the operator by the vehicle's bodywork or machinery.These blind spots present significant danger to objects close to the vehicle and inhibit the user's ability to operate and manoeuvre the vehicle or its machinery effectively.
Legislation in some countries requires additional mirrors or reversing cameras on vehicles of a certain size or function, but these still leaves significant blind spots. ASL360 systems are complementary to existing cameras systems, which can be integrated easily into its user interface.
ASL360 Applications
SURROUND VIEW
ASL360 surround view is a multi-camera system that processes video from multiple ultra-wide-angle cameras in a single, high performance Electronic Control Unit (ECU). This makes a very efficient and cost-effective solution for applications where the driver's view is obscured.
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