Hinrichs retired from Ford in February in a management shakeup.
Wavesense said it was also adding former General Motors Co <GM.N>
Chief Financial Officer Chuck Stevens and former Continental AG
<CONG.DE> Chief Technical Officer Kurt Lehmann to an advisory
board.
Wavesense Chief Executive Tarik Bolat said the company was
working with automakers and large suppliers to commercialize its
technology, and was three to four years from starting
production.
"We will have some fundraising announcements," Bolat said.
Wavesense is testing ground penetrating radar location
technology with automakers, Hinrichs said. The company maps
underground features, then matches images from ground
penetrating radar to determine a vehicle's location. The company
is also working on a system that can help a vehicle navigate a
parking structure in self-driving mode.
Hinrichs said the technology promises to be a "significantly
lower cost solution" than lidar, which uses lasers to measure
and locate features of the road around a car.
(Reporting by Joe White; Editing by Richard Chang)
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