Children

Ford puts babies to sleep with car-simulating cradle

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The pulsating lights simulate the passing streetlights
A different kind of Ford
Ford brings the soothing sounds, sights and vibrations of the car into the nursery
Ford develops the Max Motor Dreams
Ford develops the Max Motor Dreams
Much more technical than the average cradle or crib
Despite all the tech below, Ford's Max Motor Dreams bed has a simple look that would blend in with other nursery furniture
Ford Max Motor Dreams baby bed
The audio system plays a gentle engine soundtrack
Ford Max Motor Dreams baby bed
The pulsating lights simulate the passing streetlights
The app lets parents record the noises and movements of their own car to create an accurate replication
The app lets parents record the noises and movements of their own car to create an accurate replication
Ford Max Motor Dreams baby bed
Ford Max Motor Dreams baby bed
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It's a phenomenon that many parents know well. The infant who just won't go to sleep at night, in a warm, cozy haven of slumber, will nod off in the car as if the subject of a master hypnotist. It doesn't matter that the engine's rumbling, bumps and potholes rattling the chassis, horns blaring outside ... baby's fast asleep. This fact can sometimes motivate desperate 3 a.m. car laps around the block, but Ford has a better idea: a baby bed that mimics the feeling, sound and light of riding in a car.

In a nice little piece of advertising that highlights one timeless bond between car and family, Ford and partners have developed what they call the Max Motor Dreams cot. If it works as designed, many new parents might call it "godsend."

A different kind of Ford

Ford isn't the first company to think of turning the sleep-inducing car ride into an actual baby product. Fisher Price had a similar idea with its Cruisin' Motion Soother, and there has also been at least one device built to secure to a crib and provide car ride-like vibrations. Ford's design is a more complete system, though, and even includes an app.

The app ensures that baby's experience remains uniform from family car to cradle. Parents record the sound and movement of the actual family car. With this data, the Max Motor Dreams recreates the specific motion and sound, instead of just a generic sound/vibration pattern.

The app lets parents record the noises and movements of their own car to create an accurate replication

The mattress rocks gently to simulate the subtle, soothing movement of the car ride, while a built-in audio system plays a restrained engine soundtrack to add the right background noise. Soft lighting flows around the sides and ends, imitating the gentle glow of streetlights outside the car window.

"While a quick drive in the family car can work wonders in getting baby off to sleep, the poor old parents still have to be awake and alert at the wheel," says Alejandro López Bravo, a designer at Espada y Santa Cruz, the Spanish creative studio that designed the Max Motor Dreams. "The Max Motor Dreams could make the everyday lives of a lot of people a little bit better."

The Max Motor Dreams was designed to serve as part of a Ford of Spain ad campaign. Ford says that while the design was developed as a one-off pilot, it's considering pursuing production based on the number of inquiries it's received.

Next inquiry: What can the Blue Oval do about diapers?

Source: Ford

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2 comments
Milton
Better to burn kWh rather than Gasoline.
TobyWorth
I recall that sheep's leg bones were denser when standing on a platform vibrating at 30Hz. I'm just wondering what this will do to a baby's skeletal development...?