You’re driving. The phone beeps. You know you’ve received a notification. It could be something important. It could be about those jeans you ordered, or it could be a Facebook update from someone about a burger they’ve just eaten.
You’ll never know, because you’re driving….
..but you just have to find out. Don’t you? You need to know if it was unimportant or just totally unimportant.
So you pick up the phone, enter your unlock code, head into messages and then… you’ve just smashed into a row of cars and caused untold carnage.
You shouldn’t use it. We know that. However, people are using their phones at the wheel and, with smartphones replacing the traditional satnav, there’s still tenuous reasons for having one right next to you.
However, despite the fact that we could activate flight mode before driving a car, Nissan have come up with a rather old-school approach to totally disable your phone. It uses a prototype storage compartment inside their “Juke” which is lined with a Faraday cage. It’s similar to those steel-constructed supermarkets that are now getting built on stilts (my wife can never get a signal at Tesco) and blocks all signals once the phone is inside.
Nissan call this a “Signal Shield”. They have created this after research revealed that the average mobile phone user checks their device 85 times a day.
Pete Williams, who’s the RAC road safety spokesman, tells us..
A Faraday cage is named after the English scientist Michael Faraday, and was invented first in 1836. It will cancel out radio waves and stops your phone from receiving or sending calls, texts and data.
Whilst I can see the thinking behind this, it also means that you can’t use your phone as a satnav and you won’t be able to make or receive any calls through a car kit or Bluetooth headset.
Nissan Signal Shield concept uses 180-year-old invention
to tackle smartphone distraction behind the wheel
See how the Nissan Signal Shield works here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=76W_gVh2OVo&feature=youtu.be
Nissan GB adopts Victorian-era (19th century) technology to reduce smartphone distraction while driving
Nissan Signal Shield concept creates in-car compartment that blocks all cellular, Bluetooth and Wi-Fi signals
Built into the armrest of Nissan’s acclaimed Juke crossover
Concept highlights a growing problem of smartphone use at the wheel
Almost one in five drivers admit to having illegally texted while driving
London, UK (May 03, 2017) – Victorian invention, 21st century application. Nissan GB has adopted a technology that’s almost 200 years old to create a concept solution for reducing smartphone distraction at the wheel.
The beauty of the design is its simplicity. The Nissan Signal Shield is a prototype compartment within the arm rest of a Nissan Juke that is lined with a Faraday cage, an invention dating back to the 1830s.
Once a mobile device is placed in the compartment and the lid closed, the Nissan Signal Shield creates a ‘silent zone’, blocking all of the phone’s incoming and outgoing cellular, Bluetooth and Wi-Fi connections.
The concept is designed to give drivers a choice about whether to eliminate the distractions caused by the millions of text messages, social media notifications and app alerts that are ‘pushed’ to smartphones each day.
A growing problem, the number of drivers admitting to handling their phone in the car has increased from 8% in 2014 to 31% in 2016, according to the RAC.(1)
Users are becoming habitually more tempted to check text messages and notifications as they appear on their phone’s screen, even if they are driving. Nissan’s own research found almost one in five drivers (18%) admitted to having texted behind the wheel.
All Nissan crossovers are available with Bluetooth connectivity to allow drivers to make and receive hands-free phone calls when it is safe to do so. NissanConnect, or Apple CarPlay on the all-new Nissan Micra, enable further integration with a phone’s apps.
The Nissan Signal Shield concept provides optional connectivity, giving drivers the choice between being able to contact and be contacted from the road, or creating a ‘phone-free’ space and time. It means a digital detox and a drive that’s free of incoming distractions.
If drivers want to listen to music or podcasts stored on their smartphone, they can still connect to the car’s entertainment system via the USB or auxiliary ports. The device will maintain wired connectivity even when in the Nissan Signal Shield compartment.
To restore the phone’s wireless connections, drivers just need to open the arm rest to reveal the compartment – which can be done without taking eyes off the road or touching the phone itself – and the phone can reconnect with the mobile network and the car’s Bluetooth system.
The innovation works on the principle of the Faraday cage, an enclosure made of a conductive material, such as wire mesh, which blocks electromagnetic fields. It is named after the pioneering English scientist Michael Faraday, who invented it in the 1830s.
When an electronic device, like a smartphone, is placed inside, any incoming electromagnetic signals – such as cellular or Bluetooth data – are distributed across the cage’s external conducting material and so prevented from reaching the device.
Alex Smith, Managing Director, Nissan Motor GB Ltd. said; “Nissan produces some of the safest cars on the road today, but we are always looking at new ways to improve the wellbeing of our customers. Mobile phone use at the wheel is a growing concern across the automotive industry, and indeed society, particularly with the high number of ‘pushed’ communications, such as texts, social media notifications and app alerts that tempt drivers to reach for their devices.”
“The Nissan Signal Shield concept presents one possible solution for giving drivers the choice to remove all smartphone distractions while driving. This is about delivering more control at the wheel, not less. Some drivers are immune to the activity of their smartphone, but for those who struggle to ignore the beeps and pings, this concept provides a simple solution in this very ‘connected’ world we live in.”
RAC road safety spokesman Pete Williams said: “Our research shows that handheld phone use by drivers has reached epidemic proportions. As mobile phone technology has advanced significantly many people have become addicted to them. However, the use of a handheld phone when driving represents both a physical and mental distraction and it has been illegal since 2003.
“The Nissan Signal Shield is a good example of a technology that can help drivers be phone smart. For those who can’t avoid the temptation, this simple but pretty clever tech gives them a valuable mobile-free zone. We are asking all drivers to make a personal commitment not to use a handheld phone at the wheel by visiting www.bephonesmart.uk and sharing their promise with their friends and family.”