hawkbox
Well-Known Member
- Joined
- May 15, 2015
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- Arizona...in the heat
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- '18 GT Premium PP
Wait did someone say you can turn that POS CWA off? How? I did not see it in the book..
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I, too, am probably just being paranoid but there have been multiple situations where I have sped up but entered the shoulder or other lane to avoid being rear-ended. I would also question if there has been enough calibration of the system that it is not able to be fooled by something as well. I am an alert and conscious driver, and have a track record of doing things in a way that keeps me out of harms way. Until there is a proven track record here, I am with Norm. Would rather let my skill and experience do the work as opposed to the tech.Have you not seen the commercials for these systems by other automakers? The car stops within inches of the object. INCHES. That means that you wouldn't want to let up on the brakes even if there was an impending rear collision because then you'd slam into the guy in front going that much faster and causing that much more damage.
I think people are just uneasy and hesitant to see the implementation of systems that encourage people to be lackadaisical when it comes to piloting their two-ton death machine - founded in reality or not. I don't think it's quite as easy as people being purposefully anti-intellectual about it.You guys are not understanding how this works if all you can say is, "I don't want it to brake for me." It does not take control away from the driver. If you drive like you always do then you will never notice it, simple as that.
I've seen systems like these save people's lives and I've seen people die from situations where this tech would have saved them. That's the bottom line.
Some of you are being small minded and think you know what it does but you are really pretty far off.....learn more before you post literally unfounded concerns based on anxiety and lack of information.
You turn the system to low sensitivity or disable by covering sensors for track days.I track my car from time to time, and I really wouldn't want a system like this doing anything when I'm starting to ease off the brakes in order to get some front tire grip back to get turned into the corner that I was doing the braking for. Which could easily be a 125 - 65 @ 1g braking event into a 1.2g corner in traffic separated by maybe a couple of car lengths.
What kind of car did you have where the "ABS got it wrong?" What does "get it wrong mean? Do you mean there was a low traction condition where ABS activated when you would have preferred to skid across the road instead because "you got this?" More likely than not, if you are in a situation where ABS is activating, you already surpassed the limits of the vehicle in the current conditions and you did it as a human being.So educate me. Start by explaining whether such a system can determine road conditions (i.e. the amount of grip that it has to work with, and from that how early it must activate) in real time. If it only assumes some fixed amount of grip - as suggested by the vehicle performances in awmustang's video link - then it's at best a damage mitigation feature. But you and I both know that people will believe (or be led to believe) that it's a crash avoidance thing - which is a whole 'nother level . . . and a predictable if unintended consequence.
If I hadn't already experienced episodes where ABS flat-out got it wrong and where ESC (my wife's car has this. mine doesn't) was unreasonably quick to intervene, I'd be more willing to accept things like this. But I was an engineer before retiring, so I'm inclined to give everything new a sanity check, and I've learned to value my own experiences and observations as part of that process. It's served me well so far . . .
I track my car from time to time, and I really wouldn't want a system like this doing anything when I'm starting to ease off the brakes in order to get some front tire grip back to get turned into the corner that I was doing the braking for. Which could easily be a 125 - 65 @ 1g braking event into a 1.2g corner in traffic separated by maybe a couple of car lengths. Normal street driving is far more conservative and mildly paced, though this is balanced/offset by not always being as predictable.
There is no question that this system would have been of value to my Dad in the last few years before he passed, and I think I still have the accident report that proves it (he was still driving, albeit under a daytime restriction, at age 91). So I'm not universally against it, maybe just against it being universally fitted or forced to use it.
Norm
Picture a road as seen from the side, where the contour drops fairly abruptly. Uneven panels on a concrete highway is a good example, and there is a very similar situation on a road that I commonly use. In a little more detail, it's pretty close to this road's entrance to a fairly busy 4-lane divided state highway, so getting stopped is of high priority.What kind of car did you have where the "ABS got it wrong?" What does "get it wrong mean? Do you mean there was a low traction condition where ABS activated when you would have preferred to skid across the road instead because "you got this?" More likely than not, if you are in a situation where ABS is activating, you already surpassed the limits of the vehicle in the current conditions and you did it as a human being.
Can have and does have are two different things. All the sensors in the world won't ensure that a system calibrated for dry pavement will do a good enough job in the wet.A vehicle can have rain sensors, heat sensors, long and short distance radar, blind spot monitors, parking sensors, rear impact prediction sensors, etc etc etc. ABS has improved immensely since the 90s or early 2000's.
If these things are only on when cruise control is active, I can relax a bit (I don't ever use CC even on longer trips). What I was getting at was if a system that can autonomously activate the brakes was something you could not deactivate, it could very well do something inappropriate. Chances are you won't be braking at 1g for a high-g turn on the street . . . but that doesn't eliminate the possibility that such a situation could arise.All of the fully automatic braking systems that I am aware of are only active when cruise control is active, otherwise is is a passive warning and braking assist feature in which the warning beep can be turned off at will. Are you using cruise control on the race track? It sounds like you are under some impression that these systems are waiting with bated breath in some aggressive anticipatory state to take control from you and run you off the road, which is pretty hilarious. Again, if YOU steer and YOU brake your own car, the system will never activate anyways.
The system Ford has out now, this is the case. Other manufacturers have introduced system that are always active and can activate the brakes at any time without the cruise being on. Ford's new system will do this as well because the safety rating agencies are giving higher ratings to cars with these systems.All of the fully automatic braking systems that I am aware of are only active when cruise control is active, otherwise is is a passive warning and braking assist feature in which the warning beep can be turned off at will. Are you using cruise control on the race track? It sounds like you are under some impression that these systems are waiting with bated breath in some aggressive anticipatory state to take control from you and run you off the road, which is pretty hilarious. Again, if YOU steer and YOU brake your own car, the system will never activate anyways.
My point was that by the time these systems activate there is no room for rubber banding. When they activate, you only have room to come to a stop before hitting the car in front of you with 100% pedal pressure. If you are actively hitting the brakes and doing that rubber banding you speak of, this system will never activate.You're assuming a bit too much here. I'm not the guy in the current TV advertisement who is 'saved' from hitting a parked car as he was about to drop his daughter off at school and was momentarily distracted.
There is a difference, as I can (and do when the situation arises) gauge my braking according to both what I'm trying to not hit in front of me and what I'm trying to not let hit me from behind. Sort of "rubberbanding" the overall distance between the guy ahead and the guy behind. It's a useful skill to have, and not something that these systems are described as having. Not yet, at least.
I'm quite certain these systems can't evaluate road conditions. It would appear that they are calibrated for dry roads. However, if you are approaching a car at such a speed and are within a significantly close distance that this activates while you are on a slippery road then you are a terrible driver and I don't think anyone has sold these systems as replacements for terrible driving.So educate me. Start by explaining whether such a system can determine road conditions (i.e. the amount of grip that it has to work with, and from that how early it must activate) in real time. If it only assumes some fixed amount of grip - as suggested by the vehicle performances in awmustang's video link - then it's at best a damage mitigation feature. But you and I both know that people will believe (or be led to believe) that it's a crash avoidance thing - which is a whole 'nother level . . . and a predictable if unintended consequence.
It is my understanding that these systems only activate when the driver is doing nothing at all. If you are actively steering or braking, the system is supposed to assume the driver has the situation in hand and won't activate. Time will tell if that actually happens, but that's the design.I, too, am probably just being paranoid but there have been multiple situations where I have sped up but entered the shoulder or other lane to avoid being rear-ended. I would also question if there has been enough calibration of the system that it is not able to be fooled by something as well. I am an alert and conscious driver, and have a track record of doing things in a way that keeps me out of harms way. Until there is a proven track record here, I am with Norm. Would rather let my skill and experience do the work as opposed to the tech.