Under normal circumstances, it takes four hours of simulator training to get on the bus. In some areas, it is stipulated that driver simulation training generally takes 5 to 8 hours, which is divided into two times, each time lasting 2 to 4 hours, and the interval between each time is generally about one week.
The cockpit of driving simulator consists of cockpit seat, vision computer, video screen (19 inch display), operation sensor, data acquisition card, earphone and microphone. The cockpit contains the same operating components as the real vehicle, as well as the "five major" operating mechanisms: steering wheel, clutch, foot brake, throttle and hand brake. Real vehicle transmission: reverse gear, first gear, second gear, third gear, fourth gear, fifth gear and neutral gear (automatic gear only includes forward gear, reverse gear and parking gear). Operating switches for real vehicles: left turn signal, right turn signal, emergency light, horn, ignition switch, main switch, seat belt, door, wiper, high beam, low beam and alternating far and near beams. The cockpit can be used for both networking training and single-machine training.