ProPilot

Latest

  • Nissan to invest $18 billion in EV development over the next five years

    Nissan to invest $17.6 billion in EV development over the next five years

    by 
    Steve Dent
    Steve Dent
    11.29.2021

    Nissan will invest 2 trillion yen ($17.6 billion) over the next five years developing new EVs and battery technology.

  • Nissan Ariya EV

    Nissan unveils its $40,000 electric Ariya crossover

    by 
    Richard Lawler
    Richard Lawler
    07.15.2020

    Nissan's next EV is this crossover, the Ariya. It will go on sale next year with prices starting at about $40,000.

  • Nissan

    Nissan's ProPilot 2.0 driver assist allows hands-off highway driving

    by 
    Richard Lawler
    Richard Lawler
    05.16.2019

    Nissan's ProPilot driver assist could comfortably control the car with little to no input already, as Autoblog experienced on a road trip last year, but it still required a driver's hand on the wheel. Now the company has announced ProPilot 2.0 will launch first on its Skyline sedan in Japan, which supports hands-off driving within a single lane. Nissan says its next-gen driver assistance system is a world's first, but we've seen similar technology from Cadillac's Super Cruise over the last two years, which also allows for hands-off operation as long as the car doesn't need to change lanes.

  • Engadget

    Nissan's IMQ concept looks more like a stealth fighter than a crossover

    by 
    Roberto Baldwin
    Roberto Baldwin
    03.06.2019

    The great thing about concept cars is that automakers can just shoot for the stars when it comes to features. The Nissan IMQ concept unveiled at the Geneva Motor show is a good example of promising a lot of stuff in a car while simultaneously plotting the course for the future.

  • Infiniti

    Infiniti unveils a semi-autonomous QX50 for 2019

    by 
    Andrew Tarantola
    Andrew Tarantola
    11.28.2017

    After nearly a year of teasing, Infiniti finally debuted its newest QX50 crossover at the 2017 Los Angeles Auto Show on Tuesday. The vehicle features not only an inline-4 engine capable of adjusting the length of each cylinder's piston stroke on the fly, it's also the first Infiniti to incorporate Nissan's ProPilot semi-autonomous driver assist system.

  • Roberto Baldwin / Engadget

    Nissan's 2018 Leaf is a smarter, longer-lasting EV

    by 
    Roberto Baldwin
    Roberto Baldwin
    09.07.2017

    Nissan's pure EV Leaf has been largely dominating the electric car market for seven years. So a refresh has been a long time coming. This week the company finally unveiled a vehicle with a higher range, an optional semi-autonomous feature and one-pedal driving. None of this is is necessarily groundbreaking, but after being behind the wheel of a preproduction model in Las Vegas, it's apparent to me that the automobile is ready to take on the latest crop of electric cars.

  • Nissan

    Nissan preps its semi-autonomous driving assist for the US

    by 
    Jon Fingas
    Jon Fingas
    07.23.2017

    Nissan is one step closer to bringing its semi-autonomous ProPilot Assist feature to American roads. The automaker has shed more light on the US-optimized version of the assistant ahead of its launch in the new Leaf near the end of 2017. As Nissan stresses, the initial version is intended only to make life easier during single-lane highway driving. Think of it as a sort of Autopilot lite. It'll use a camera, radar and sensors to keep you in your lane, maintain speed and brake if the driver ahead slows down, but it won't change lanes, handle city streets or brake in an emergency. It's definitely not a hands-free option -- it'll deactivate if you have a less-than-firm grip on the steering wheel.

  • Nissan

    Nissan teases self-driving features for the next-gen Leaf

    by 
    Steve Dent
    Steve Dent
    06.23.2017

    The next generation Leaf EV will be the first with ProPilot driver assist in North American and Europe, and Nissan has just showed how that will look. Activated by a button on the steering wheel, it can control steering, braking and acceleration, but only in a single freeway lane. The driver can see exactly what's going on with the aid of a fancy animation front and center in the largely digital dashboard.

  • Nissan

    Why London is a self-driving nightmare for the Nissan Leaf

    by 
    Matt Brian
    Matt Brian
    03.09.2017

    For the people sitting in the lobby of the Aloft ExCel, a premium hotel in the heart of London's Docklands district, it was a typical day. Some were there on business, others to see the city. A handful of parents were patiently waiting to be ushered in for their weekly mother and baby swimming classes. However, in one corner, just out of view, were some of the top executives from Japanese car maker Nissan. They were busy making last-minute preparations for a self-driving vehicle that has been quietly traversing London's streets as part of the first ever European tests. These secret experiments -- the first Nissan has conducted in Europe -- could shape how Brits travel in the coming years.

  • REUTERS/Steve Marcus

    Nissan's next Leaf will be ready to drive itself

    by 
    Richard Lawler
    Richard Lawler
    01.05.2017

    Today at CES, Nissan CEO Carlos Ghosn confirmed plans for a follow-up to his company's flagship EV, the Leaf. While speculation has focused on how much range a successor could add to the current model, the announcement emphasized how a new Leaf represents "the next chapter of Nissan Intelligent Power" and will include ProPilot autonomous technology. The car is due "in the near future" -- at a media roundtable Ghosn said "we can't announce new EVs in advance because unlike our competitors, we're already selling them."

  • ICYMI: Channel your Wall-E future with self-driving tech

    by 
    Kerry Davis
    Kerry Davis
    09.30.2016

    try{document.getElementById("aol-cms-player-1").style.display="none";}catch(e){}Today on In Case You Missed It: Nissan created smart chairs that autonomously move themselves while people are seated in them, modeled off of the car maker's ProPILOT driving system. The chairs are being used in Japan to keep people neatly in line outside of restaurants and when one chair has been vacated, it will move itself to the end of the row, while everyone else is bumped up.