PressClub Canada · Article.
BMW M4 Concept Iconic Lights – bright ideas for enhanced driving pleasure.
Tue Jan 06 10:00:00 CET 2015 Press Release
At the Consumer Electronics Show (CES ) 2015 in Las Vegas, BMW is providing further evidence that it is a world leader in the development of Laserlight. Having already supplied its first models with Laserlight to customers, it is now presenting further laser functions for vehicles of the future. Laserlight is now able to offer its impressively long beam range of up to 600 metres in combination with the BMW Selective Beam function (anti-dazzle High-Beam Assistant). At CES, BMW is unveiling ways in which Laserlight, extensively integrated with assistance systems and vehicle sensors, can be used to implement new intelligent lighting functions for enhanced safety and comfort. For example, it can work with the navigation system to illuminate corners well in advance, while a laser-based Dynamic Light Spot can provide early warning of people or animals at night from a distance of up to 100 metres.
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Author.
Barb Pitblado
BMW Group
Munich/Las Vegas. At the Consumer Electronics Show (CES ) 2015 in Las Vegas, BMW is providing further evidence that it is a world leader in the development of Laserlight. Having already supplied its first models with Laserlight to customers, it is now presenting further laser functions for vehicles of the future. Laserlight is now able to offer its impressively long beam range of up to 600 metres in combination with the BMW Selective Beam function (anti-dazzle High-Beam Assistant). At CES, BMW is unveiling ways in which Laserlight, extensively integrated with assistance systems and vehicle sensors, can be used to implement new intelligent lighting functions for enhanced safety and comfort. For example, it can work with the navigation system to illuminate corners well in advance, while a laser-based Dynamic Light Spot can provide early warning of people or animals at night from a distance of up to 100 metres.
New lighting technology opens up design scope.
The BMW M4 Concept Iconic Lights model, with exterior paintwork
in Cool White metallic, features a new interpretation of the typical
BMW twin round headlights. On the move, the laser technology can be
identified by the fine blue strips inside the lights. Meanwhile, the
rear light clusters of the BMW M4 Concept Iconic Lights model are
based on OLEDs (organic light-emitting diodes), which produce light
from wafer-thin semiconducting layers of organic material. For the
first time, both the tail lights and rear direction indicators feature
OLED technology. The illuminated surfaces are positioned to produce a
three-dimensional effect. OLEDs also take up less room on account of
their thin size.
Shining example of innovative technology: anti-dazzle
Laserlight and laser projection.
BMW
Laserlight sets new standards in terms of beam range and brightness.
Inside the laser headlights, the “coherent” monochromatic blue laser
light is converted into harmless white light. A special optical system
directs the rays from the high-performance diodes onto a phosphor
plate inside the light, which converts the beam into a very bright
white light that is similar to natural daylight and pleasant to the
eye. Despite consuming 30 percent less energy, the parallel light beam
is ten times more intense than that produced by halogen, xenon or LED
light sources. BMW Laserlight also has a beam range of up to 600
metres, more than twice that of conventional headlights, for increased
safety in the dark. The camera-based BMW Selective Beam system, which
is controlled by dynamic actuators, prevents oncoming or preceding
vehicles being dazzled and allows the laser high beam to be left on at
all times.
Enhanced safety through connectivity.
Extensive integration of the innovative Laserlight with other
vehicle systems allows a variety of intelligent lighting functions to
be implemented. Integration with the navigation system, for example,
allows the proactive Adaptive Headlight control system to illuminate
corners even before the steering wheel is turned. Laserlight also adds
a new dimension to the Night Vision system’s Dynamic Light Spot
function. In pitch-dark conditions, people and animals can be detected
from a distance of up to 100 metres, by infrared camera, and
“spotlighted” by the laser-based Dynamic Light Spot. This is a longer
range than that of any other system. Also, if the vehicle detects
reduced clear road width ahead, the laser headlights can be used to
provide “narrow clearance” lighting. A laser projection function
indicates the exact width of the vehicle in relation to the road to
allow safe passage through the narrow space. BMW M4 Concept Iconic
Lights also showcases a further “visionary” system: “High Power Laser”
diodes. This system projects driver information directly onto the road
in front of the vehicle, allowing drivers to concentrate optimally on
the traffic even in pitch darkness.
OLED rear light cluster with three-dimensional effect.
Organic light-emitting diodes – OLEDs – are an
innovative, efficient, sustainable light source that form the basis
for the BMW Organic Light system. OLEDs have a low power consumption,
which helps to further reduce vehicle CO2 emissions. Another
sustainable feature of this technology is the fact that no expensive
rare earth metals are required in the production process. Unlike
ordinary LEDs, which are a point light source, OLEDs produce light
uniformly over their entire surface. The OLED elements are very thin,
with a thickness of just 1.4 millimetres. Also, the individual modules
can be activated separately, generating new possibilities for creating
different lighting effects at the rear light clusters.
Different lighting effects in different driving modes.
In the past, rigorous legal requirements
regulating the brightness of vehicle lighting have limited the number
of lighting functions that it was possible to implement with OLED
technology. On the BMW M4 Concept Iconic Lights model, BMW Organic
Light is used in the tail lights and rear direction indicators. By
activating the OLED segments individually, it is possible to create
different rear lighting effects in different driving modes. Whereas
normally the L-shape is wide and uniformly illuminated, in Sport mode
a different-shaped light pattern can be used by activating only some
of the OLED segments. The rear light then appears as a narrow, focused
and sharply defined “strip” of light.
New technologies create new design options.
Lighting is an important design element in modern vehicles. From
the front, all vehicles of the BMW core brand are instantly
identifiable by the combination of their twin round headlights and the
hallmark kidney grille. At night, the four glowing corona rings form a
distinctive signature.
The BMW M4 Concept Iconic Lights model
presents a new interpretation of the twin circular headlight theme.
The headlights feature laser technology which is attractively
highlighted by fine blue LED strips when the vehicle is on the move.
Thanks to the new laser technology it was also possible to give the
headlights a flat and sharply sculpted design.
The L-shaped rear light clusters are just as distinctive in terms of styling as the front lights. The “L” shape is a typical design hallmark that accentuates the width of the rear and gives the vehicle a striking and powerful look that always stands out from the crowd, whether at night or during the daytime. On current models, LED-powered light strips and other light elements emphasise the L-shape at night and make the brand identity more easily recognisable in the dark. BMW first presented a rear light cluster with OLED elements on the BMW Vision Future Luxury concept model, which made its world debut in Beijing in April 2014. BMW M4 Concept Iconic Lights displays its own version of this design. Its M-style OLED rear light cluster marks a new evolution of the typical BMW L-shaped lighting design which, with the BMW 7 Series launch, was reinforced with a distinctive “glowing” effect. OLED technology makes it possible to create a new, more three-dimensional and at the same time very sharply defined appearance.
BMW M GmbH will be launching a production model featuring OLED technology in the near future.