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Audi Electronic Chassis Platform Integrates Vehicle Controls Into One System

The new electronic control unit will be 10 times faster than the system it replaces.

Dan Carney, Senior Editor

August 17, 2020

16 Slides
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Audi’s signature Quattro full-time all-wheel-drive system debuted 40 years ago. During the intervening decades, cars have added a multitude of subsystems for powertrain and chassis control, producing a proliferation of electronic control systems.

Now, the company wants to simplify these many discrete computer systems into a single, all-encompassing control unit that will be ten times faster than today’s ECUs. Speed of operation isn’t the only potential benefit, according to Audi.

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Audi's centralized vehicle dynamics computer.

By controlling as many as 90 systems such as the Electronic Chassis Platform (ECP), electromechanical Active Roll Stabilization (eAWS), predictive active suspension, and Dynamic All-wheel Steering (DAS) into a single controller, these systems can better coordinate their actions to work more effectively. Today’s computers control only about 20 different components.

Efficiency will benefit too because electrified vehicles’ integrated Brake Control System (iBRS) can better blend regeneration with friction braking to recapture the maximum amount of energy when decelerating. The ability to simultaneously adjust the shock absorbers’ damper compression rate within milliseconds can improve brake performance and regeneration efficiency, as it manages the forward weight transfer while slowing.

Crucially, this future integrated system will work with all powertrain types; combustion engines, hybrids, or electric drive vehicles. It will also work with various drive layouts, so front-, rear-, and all-wheel drive vehicles will employ the same system.

Many of the components that will come under unified control are already in service in Audi models today. We have compiled some of these technologies in the slideshow above.

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Audi controllers will support the full spectrum of drive layouts.

About the Author

Dan Carney

Senior Editor, Design News

Dan’s coverage of the auto industry over three decades has taken him to the racetracks, automotive engineering centers, vehicle simulators, wind tunnels, and crash-test labs of the world.

A member of the North American Car, Truck, and Utility of the Year jury, Dan also contributes car reviews to Popular Science magazine, serves on the International Engine of the Year jury, and has judged the collegiate Formula SAE competition.

Dan is a winner of the International Motor Press Association's Ken Purdy Award for automotive writing, as well as the National Motorsports Press Association's award for magazine writing and the Washington Automotive Press Association's Golden Quill award.

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He has held a Sports Car Club of America racing license since 1991, is an SCCA National race winner, two-time SCCA Runoffs competitor in Formula F, and an Old Dominion Region Driver of the Year award winner. Co-drove a Ford Focus 1.0-liter EcoBoost to 16 Federation Internationale de l’Automobile-accredited world speed records over distances from just under 1km to over 4,104km at the CERAM test circuit in Mortefontaine, France.

He was also a longtime contributor to the Society of Automotive Engineers' Automotive Engineering International magazine.

He specializes in analyzing technical developments, particularly in the areas of motorsports, efficiency, and safety.

He has been published in The New York Times, NBC News, Motor Trend, Popular Mechanics, The Washington Post, Hagerty, AutoTrader.com, Maxim, RaceCar Engineering, AutoWeek, Virginia Living, and others.

Dan has authored books on the Honda S2000 and Dodge Viper sports cars and contributed automotive content to the consumer finance book, Fight For Your Money.

He is a member and past president of the Washington Automotive Press Association and is a member of the Society of Automotive Engineers

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