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> Tesla autopilot should be outright illegal.

Is the problem lane keeping, traffic adaptive cruise control, and automatic emergency braking? Or is it the marketing around it and how people use it? Maybe it's the lack of a controlled stop when the driver attention check fails?

Plenty of other cars have driver assistance features, but we don't hear about people not paying attention to their well equiped Pacifica and it crashing into things. Maybe because there's no videos from Chyrsler saying the car is driving itself, driver there for legal purposes only. Maybe because the driver assistance equipped unit sales are lower. Maybe the collisions are happening, but don't make the news.

Driver assistance features seem like a good idea if used properly. Drive normally, but the computer is always supervising and will help if it sees a problem you don't. They don't work well when the easily distractable human driver is supposed to be supervising the computer.



Honesty I don’t know what causes it. Driving assist stuff is great.

My Hyundai actually has great lane keep assist, emergency braking, cross traffic alert and braking, plus radar cruise. It will disengage lane keep and radar cruise if you don’t put your hands back on the wheel after alerts.

Maybe it’s because many buyers are younger? Or Tesla appears to be more techy and futuristic? Or maybe it is the weird approach to marketing musk is doing. It is a bit reckless imo.

I don’t really care if someone dies being an idiot and ignoring warnings. I do care if they slam into another driver that has no choice but to share the road with a Tesla.


Your Hyundai has the same features as Autopilot. Why should we have to share the road with it? Because regulators allow it.


Autopilot = radar cruise and lane keep?


Was radar and lane keep. Vision proved superior by regulatory tests. Dropping radar helped with phantom braking due to coarse forward facing radar.

https://www.ancap.com.au/media-and-gallery/media-releases/th...

https://electrek.co/2021/06/29/tesla-vision-active-safety-fe...

https://www.teslarati.com/tesla-vision-model-y-highest-euro-...

https://www.tesla.com/blog/model-y-earns-5-star-safety-ratin...

> Model Y also received a leading score of 98 percent in Euro NCAP's Safety Assist category. This result was achieved with Model Y vehicles equipped with Tesla Vision, our camera vision and neural net processing system that now comes standard in all Tesla vehicles delivered in North America and Europe. This score was a result that many did not believe was possible without using radar.

(own four Teslas of varying vintages, from 2018 to 2021, have driven over 120k miles on Autopilot)


The only Tesla scored on autonomous assist features by NCAP was a 2020 Model 3 and it scored pretty poorly.

You can look it up below just select Tesla as Make: https://www.euroncap.com/en/ratings-rewards/assisted-driving...

What you are referring to is safety rating, which nobody is disputing, however, it did not prove "vision" superior. The car is safe for sure but it wasn't because of vision but of structure.


Vision replaced front facing radar for AEB and TACC (traffic aware cruise control). The safety tests including automatic emergency braking, which Vision provides signal for with regards to forward travel. Automated lane changes were always Vision.

You can confirm the transition did not have a material impact on Autopilot safety using their data: https://www.tesla.com/VehicleSafetyReport


> Autopilot = radar cruise and lake keep?

That and user driven lane change automation. (fully automatic lane changes for navigation or speed management is apparently in beta based on Tesla's online manual [1]).

IMHO, that's kind of the root of the problem. As individual features, it's not super exciting, but when you call it autopilot, people think it does more than it does (which is fairly true of airplane autopilot as well).

[1] https://www.tesla.com/ownersmanual/model3/en_us/GUID-20F2262...


I mean the lane change and using navigation is a pretty big jump from the Hyundai system which is dumb.

Hyundai would not be able to attempt to drive me home. While, you can get into a Tesla, enter an address and hope for the best.

Calling it autopilot is for sure part of the problem. The average individual is dumb and won’t ever open a manual or read any prompts. But then again they are there for legal reasons.




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