Teleoperation is defined as the method of remote controlling machinery or vehicles from a remote location. This could include cranes, diggers, forklift trucks, and other machinery that need to operate in hazardous areas. But it can also be used where there is a lack of locally qualified personnel or lower cost remote teleoperator workers could be utilized instead as a cost-effective alternative.
This is a real-life example of the Zao-SH in action where a remote digger is being controlled from an operations platfrom in Tokyo that is 280km away.
To operate remote heavy machinery from a faraway location, it is necessary to see out of the cockpit window or windscreen in real time with almost zero delay. As an operator you need a reaction time as if the operator were in sitting in the machine to any external variables, despite in fact potentially being a very long way away.
The Soliton range of Zao video encoders allows live video to be streamed from a remote location back to teleoperator center with extreme reliability, with a return path for control signals to steer, move and control the digger, crane, forklift, or other remote machine.
The Zao range of video encoders uses bonded cellular technology to send video over several different cellular operators simultaneously.
This gives an exceptionally reliable connection removing the need for reliance on a single SIM card, and in conjunction with Soliton’s RASCOW2 algorithm, it can optimize video based on available bandwidth. It will stream video even in the most challenging of situations. One major uniqueness of Soliton’s technology is the ultra-low latency. Over 4G, end-to-end latency on a public network is below 100ms from camera in the vehicle to the receiving-end monitor, a “glass-to-glass” time unheard of in this industry. With 5G connectivity, this latency is even lower.
The video encoder in the vehicle can also act as an internet hotspot. It is via this IP connection that a return command signal can be sent in real-time to control and drive the vehicle or machine.
The answer to remote driving vehicles and remote heavy machinery operation.
Remote driving is not to be confused with self-driving. In remote driving the vehicle is driven in the same way as normal by a human driver, it just happens to be in a car simulator some distance away. Self-driving is where the car decides for itself what it should do.