Truck driving simulator gives students confidence behind the wheel of a big rig - Action News
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Windsor

Truck driving simulator gives students confidence behind the wheel of a big rig

A Windsor-Essex trucking school is using software to helpthe next generation of truckers gear up forthe road.

Windsor-Essex school rolling out simulator as part of training for students

Here's what this high tech truck driving simulator can do

1 year ago
Duration 2:30
Raymond St. Jean, general manager of Northstar Trucking School in Windsor, Ont., talks about how the Virage truck driving simulator can help students get acquainted with driving a transport truck. Student truck driver Gaelyn Galbraith-Taglioni gets behind the wheel.

Gaelyn Galbraith-Taglioniputs the key into the ignition and the engine beginsto turn over.

She's behind the wheel ofa transport truck on a winding rural road with a speed limit of 80 km/h. The weather shiftsback and forth fromsunny, to rainy to snowy. Then glare from the sun affects her view.

At one point, a jogger appears out of nowhere and starts running across the road. But she reacts in time.

"Good job, you stopped your vehicle," saidRaymond St. Jean, general manager ofNorthstar Trucking School in Windsor, Ont.

"Now, you can proceed."

Galbraith-Taglioniwas experiencing driving a big rig without setting foot inside one. The student truck driver was using an advanced driving simulator made by the Quebec company Virage.

A woman at a wheel looking at large computer screens that mimic a view outside of a vehicle
Gaelyn Galbraith-Taglioni tries out the driving simulator from Virage at Northstar Truck Driving School in Windsor, Ont. (Mike Evans/CBC)

St. Jean says the trucking school is one of fewin southern Ontario that have the simulator.Startingin early June, all Northstar students will have to complete 25 hours of training on it.

"It is really awesome. It's a great way to get ready for the road," saidGalbraith-Taglioni. "I think it's really helped me out on the road because they can put you in real life experiences that you're going to experience...especially with shifting. It's definitely improved my shifting quickly."

The simulator is supposed to give studentsa tasteof what driving a tractor trailer is like right down to look of the dashboardon specific truck models, and the feel of the seat.

A view out a truck window as it looks to merge onto a highway.
A view outside the "windshield" of the truck simulator. (Mike Evans/CBC)

It can help them get comfortable with the rhythms of shifting gears, and they can train on vehicles with different transmissions.

It can also take students on the roads in scenarios they might not encounter everyday, like snowy conditions, andalso expose them to situationsthey wouldn't encounter inWindsor-Essex, like driving through mountains.

"We can re-create a lot of scenarios that unfortunately people don't experience until they're out there in the industry and they have that close call or hopefully not but they have that accident," said St. Jean.

The use of simulators is not mandatory in the industry in Ontario but St. Jean wants to see that change because of the experience they can offer.

"People should have to spend time on a simulator," he said.

With files from Mike Evans