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by londons_explore 1711 days ago
On a flat (private) road, big container-hauling truck, 65mph, stick shift car following 20 feet behind... Put the car in neutral and you can follow for miles. You need to tap the brakes occasionally to stop yourself getting too close to the truck. That tells me no engine power is being used.

Obviously it's unsafe to do on the public road for a bunch of reasons, but it really shows how good automated vehicle convoys could be for the environment if they can get close enough.

Here is a video of the effects of the same airflow: https://youtu.be/xkbe2NP30Fs

1 comments

Here's mythbusters doing it: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lttgT1XZVvE

They estimate the savings at insane 20 feet at 20 something. Far from your claimed 100%.

Could it be, that your road is not as flat as you think? That would also explain the necessary braking to not run into the truck, wouldn't it?

But I couldn't agree more: let the machines do that perfectly and safe. Let's reap those sweet 25-50% increase in fuel efficiency.

The truck they're following there doesn't go near the ground... I suspect you really need to not have any route under the truck for the airflow for it to really work well.