Skip to main content

Like a dad giving up his Camaro, Waymo killed its pod cars for self-driving vans

Earlier this year, Fiat Chrysler Automobiles (FCA) made a deal with what was then the Google self-driving car project to supply Chrysler Pacifica Hybrid minivans for conversion into prototype autonomous vehicles.

The Google self-driving project is now Waymo, but FCA is still involved. The automaker just completed production of 100 Pacifica Hybrid minivans for the project. They’re currently being outfitted with Waymo’s suite of sensors and control systems, and will begin testing in 2017.

Recommended Videos

The Pacifica Hybrid is actually a plug-in hybrid, meaning it can plug into an external power source to recharge, like an electric car. Some modifications were made to the minivans’ electrical systems, powertrains, and chassis to accept the self-driving hardware. Vehicles have already undergone testing at FCA’s proving grounds in Chelsea, Michigan, and Yucca, Arizona, as well as at Waymo facilities in California.

2017 Chrysler Pacifica Hybrid minivan Waymo Self-driving Test Fleet
Image used with permission by copyright holder

FCA and Waymo each sent a team of engineers to a site in southeastern Michigan to collaborate on the project. This marks Waymo’s first collaboration with an automaker on autonomous-driving tech, and FCA’s first significant entry into the field. As a unit of Google (and then Alphabet), Waymo first tried to go it alone in commercializing its technology, but current CEO John Krafcik has emphasized partnerships with existing car companies.

Please enable Javascript to view this content

That shift in strategy was crystallized with the announcement last week by Alphabet of the creation of Waymo as a separate company to handle future self-driving car development. With the launch of Waymo, Alphabet is ending work on its self-developed pod-like autonomous car. Krafcik has said Waymo is not in the business of making cars.

FCA and Waymo are kicking their partnership into high gear just as other companies are ratcheting up their own self-driving car efforts. Uber recently deployed a fleet of self-driving cars in San Francisco, while General Motors announced last week that it would begin testing autonomous cars on public roads in Michigan.

Stephen Edelstein
Stephen is a freelance automotive journalist covering all things cars. He likes anything with four wheels, from classic cars…
Watch San Franciscans take a ride in Waymo’s self-driving car
Waymo Jaguar I-Pace

Waymo is inviting San Francisco residents to hop inside its self-driving vehicles for a drive around the city.

Welcoming our first riders in San Francisco

Read more
Tesla issues stark warning to drivers using its Full Self-Driving mode
A Telsa Model 3 drives along a road.

Tesla in recent days rolled out a long-awaited update to its Full Self-Driving (FSD) mode that gives its vehicles a slew of driver-assist features.

But in a stark warning to owners who’ve forked out for the premium FSD feature, Tesla said that the software is still in beta and therefore “may do the wrong thing at the worst time.” It insisted that drivers should keep their "hands on the wheel and pay extra attention to the road.”

Read more
The future of transportation: Self-driving cars? Try self-driving everything
GM electric flying taxi

Technology is reshaping every aspect of our lives. Once a week in The Future Of, we examine innovations in important fields, from farming to transportation, and what they will mean in the years and decades to come. 

Stroll around any CES (virtual or otherwise) in the last decade and it’s impossible to miss all the feels the tech industry has for transportation, self-driving cars in particular. Every major technology company has its fingers in cars, from the infotainment systems powered by Google and Apple to the operating systems driven by Blackberry and Linux to the components and circuits that make up the car itself, built by Qualcomm and Nvidia and NXP and a dozen more. (And don't get me started about this Apple Car nonsense.)

Read more