Many discussions about autonomous driving start with an idealized baseline: new vehicle platforms, clean architectures, and fully controlled development environments. In this context, autonomy appears as something that can be designed from the ground up.
This perspective is understandable, but it does not reflect the reality of industrial applications. In practice, autonomy rarely starts from scratch. It emerges in existing vehicles, in operating fleets, and under real-world economic and regulatory constraints. It is precisely there that it is determined whether a technology is not only developable but also deployable.
Existing vehicles are the norm
In industries such as logistics, agriculture, mining, or public transportation, vehicles are already in use. They perform defined tasks, are integrated into processes, and are subject to clear requirements regarding availability, safety, and cost-effectiveness. In these contexts, autonomy is not introduced by replacing existing vehicles, but by further developing them.
This means: New systems must be able to integrate into existing platforms without altering their fundamental structure. Vehicle control thus becomes a matter of adaptability—not of new development.
Platform dependency as a structural obstacle
Many drive-by-wire solutions are closely tied to specific vehicle platforms. They are designed for specific electrical architectures, interfaces, and system logics. This may make sense for new vehicles. For existing platforms, however, it poses a significant hurdle.
Platform-dependent systems can only be transferred with great effort. Any deviation from the original application context requires adjustments, new safety assessments, and additional integration work. Regulatory frameworks such as ISO 26262 for functional safety highlight just how complex such adjustments are. For applications intended to scale beyond individual vehicle platforms, this dependency is not sustainable.
Retrofittability as an Architectural Criterion
Retrofittability is often viewed as a peripheral issue. In fact, it is a key indicator of system maturity. A drive-by-wire system that is retrofittable must function independently of specific vehicle platforms. It must be able to adapt to different mechanical, electrical, and functional constraints without redefining its safety logic.
This capability does not arise during the integration project, but through architectural decisions. Retrofittability is thus not an add-on, but an expression of platform independence.
Platform independence as a system principle
Platform independence does not mean that a system can be deployed unchanged in any environment. It means that the core logic of vehicle control remains stable while the system adapts to different vehicle platforms. This is crucial for autonomous applications.
While perception and decision-making logic are often software-portable, vehicle control is directly tied to physical systems. Only if this control is designed as a standalone, consistent system architecture can it be reliably transferred. Platform independence reduces integration effort, increases transparency, and improves regulatory traceability.
Scaling begins in operation
For operators of autonomous systems, platform independence is not a technical detail but an operational necessity. Fleets rarely consist of homogeneous vehicles. They grow, change, and comprise different generations and types. A system that functions only on a specific platform ties autonomy to individual vehicle projects.
A platform-independent system, on the other hand, ties autonomy to operations. This distinction determines whether autonomous functions remain isolated applications or can be transformed into scalable processes.
Autonomy as an evolutionary process
Autonomy does not arise from a complete fresh start, but through gradual integration into existing systems. Drive-by-wire plays a central role in this: it connects digital decision-making logic with physical vehicle movement. Platform approaches such as NX NextMotion from Arnold NextG follow precisely this approach by designing vehicle control as a standalone, platform-independent, and retrofittable system architecture. This ensures that autonomy is not tied to individual vehicle platforms but is made transferable and scalable.
A benchmark for real-world deployability
The suitability of a drive-by-wire system for autonomous applications is not determined solely by its performance. The decisive factor is whether it can be integrated into existing vehicles without compromising its safety and system logic. Autonomy does not begin with the ideal vehicle, but with the reality of existing fleets. Systems that take this reality into account lay the foundation for the actual introduction of autonomous applications.
Outlook
In the next installment of this series, we will examine an aspect that is often understood as a comfort feature but actually plays a central role in safe vehicle control: physically accurate force feedback and its significance for autonomous and teleoperated systems.
We control what moves!
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