SEAT testers endure freezing conditions
December 8, 2018
It’s seven in the morning at a location near the Arctic Circle. Gonzalo Giménez, the head of Brakes and Active Safety Systems at SEAT, checks the weather forecast in the hope that the day will at least be sunny as the outside temperature stands at 25 degrees below freezing.
Every year, up to 90 SEAT cars go up against snow, ice and extreme temperatures. The goal is to guarantee that all the systems function correctly before buyers take possession of their vehicles.
Their office is a frozen lake. Gonzalo and his team, made up of 16 engineers and experimenters, make their way to what will become their base for 10 weeks out of the year, working on a six square kilometre lake beneath their feet. A 60-centimetre layer of ice makes it a suitable track for driving on.
Pushing cars to their limits, these engineers carry out up to 60 different tests during the time they spend in Lapland. The first test of the day consists of deactivating the electronic stability control system by varying degrees, even completely. If the vehicle goes off course, they make sure the system stabilises the wheels so it can get back on track.
Aheadis a 200-metre long track that is half asphalt and half ice for testing high and low grip, a critical and common situation on the roads in Nordic countries. Gonzalo drives back and forth several times, braking on both surfaces simultaneously. This is how they refine the ABS system, which helps the driver control the car’s stability.
According to Gonzalo, one of the main changes has been “the way technology has evolved. It has made a difference in both the efficiency of the vehicle’s systems as in the work tools that are available to us, which are increasingly powerful and fast.” When the day is over they analyse the data obtained from the tests, and the results enable them to make any adjustments to the different systems.
Gonzalo began working in SEAT’s Zona Franca facilities in 1992 as soon as he finished his studies. “When I transferred to the Technical Centre, then located in Martorell, I had the chance to work in various departments, but I chose Chassis Experimentation. This job requires that you be passionate about cars, willing to travel all the time and know how to adapt to any circumstance”, he said.
After the Arctic chill, testingstarts all over again in the summer, when the Technical Centre engineers travel to a desert region for three weeks. They visit all five continents throughout the year to test prototypes in all sorts of weather conditions and on all types of surfaces. As a result, motorists can count on safely being able to drive on any road and in all kinds of situations.