In one of many anonymous-looking labs, a team of four semiconductor engineers is perfecting computer chips and circuit boards for in-car use. “There are up to 8000 semiconductors combined into a vehicle today,” says Stefan Simon, a senior engineer, “and 80% of the innovations are based on semiconductors.” The lab has recently worked to validate Audi’s organic LED tail-lights for production. The OLED is only a few micro-metres thick and bonded onto a 0.5mm glass substrate. OLEDs create the distinctive ‘waterfall’ pattern of Audi indicators. Also cleared for production here is the laser scanner – or Lidar – used in the A8 for Level 3 self-driving. The device is made by supplier Valeo but validated for use by Audi at Ingolstadt.
Jig is created 10 months before production starts
Audi is using digital tech to help slim panel gaps
Audi is preparing for September launch of E-tron electric SUV
Audi is using high-tech production processes to adapt for a digital future
A car's infotainment system is extensively tested before it meets its model
Test drivers use a CarPad to log their subjective views
Audi 'reinvents' design and manufacture processes ahead of EV launch

Digital advances are helping Audi to raise the quality of its design and manufacture.

30 Mar 2018 | 5291 Views | By Julian Rendell, Autocar UK

The launch in September of Audi’s first pure-electric car, the E-tron, and the increased amount of digital content in such models mean the German firm is completely reinventing the way it approaches quality procedures at its factories.

“Audi is going through its biggest change ever as it transitions to become a digital ...

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