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AlphaDecay

Quick Stops and Adaptive Cruise Control

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The car will slow down, how much depends on the situation, but it will not stop! It disengages at 25 MPH. What it does do, and is annoying is if a car moves to a turn lane and slows, the ACC grabs onto that car and will slow you down even though it is no longer in your lane. Only if the car in front has moved completely out of the line of sight of the radar and then slow will the ACC ignore it. In this situation, something like what you described could be interpreted as a brake check by someone behind you. Subaru now has the autobrake which WILL stop the car on it's own, but only if another car directly in front of it has stopped.

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The car will slow down, how much depends on the situation, but it will not stop! It disengages at 25 MPH. What it does do, and is annoying is if a car moves to a turn lane and slows, the ACC grabs onto that car and will slow you down even though it is no longer in your lane. Only if the car in front has moved completely out of the line of sight of the radar and then slow will the ACC ignore it. In this situation, something like what you described could be interpreted as a brake check by someone behind you. Subaru now has the autobrake which WILL stop the car on it's own, but only if another car directly in front of it has stopped.

 

I just replaced my Xterra with a 2015 Subaru XV Crosstrek with the Eyesight system. I got spoiled with the ACC on the FFH and wanted it on my vehicle.

 

I was told by the dealer that Subaru "Eyesight" will assist in the stopping when the vehicle is traveling at a slow speed. I believe it is 30 mph. If you are going faster than that you will get the warnings and adjusted speeds as the FFH does during ACC.

 

Maybe I need to test it out. :)

 

.

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Even if the cars did auto stop, I am not sure I would fully trust them to do it by itself. I am not ready for a self-drive vehicle.

 

 

 

I can't stand driving my wife's van and when we replace it, the new car will have a similar feature. Out here in Montana there is just too much road distance to not have ACC-like features. Now I just need a replacement that is a hybrid, AWD, increased ride height (like a crossover) and ability to light-duty tow (golf cart on a trailer kind of thing).

These reasons are why I looked at the Subaru Crosstrek. I wanted something that would get good gas mileage, be able to carry my bikes, be able to carry the kayaks and tow a small trailer when needed and have increased ride height.

 

This vehicle served all those things. I passed on the Hybrid because the difference in mpgs was not significant enough.

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The car will slow down, how much depends on the situation, but it will not stop! It disengages at 25 MPH.

Actually, it disengages right around 12 MPH. However, it can't be set until you reach 20 MPH.

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Actually, it disengages right around 12 MPH. However, it can't be set until you reach 20 MPH.

MKT is different then, thought the Fusion would be similar. The T engages at 25 MPH, but I never attempted to see where the ACC would quit, not about to either.

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MKT is different then, thought the Fusion would be similar. The T engages at 25 MPH, but I never attempted to see where the ACC would quit, not about to either.

Unfortunately, my commute frequently involves speeds fluctuating between 10 and 25... in a 55 zone. This morning, I probably drove for a good 3 miles under 25, but over 12, with the ACC set at 1 bar, which made the whole experience slightly less frustrating.

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At about 20 mph, as the traffic is slowing down, there is a "ding" and the ACC shuts off.

The manual, and my actual experience, indicate that this occurs at 12 MPH.

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Not going to worry about the MKT anymore, I traded it off this evening for a Focus for my wife. My Freestyle should suffice for now for what I used the MKT for, just without all the toys and "style". The Fusion has almost everything the MKT had, except the adaptive HID headlights and suspension, oh and heated steering wheel, and cooled seats, which really weren't, the heated seats in the Fusion are so much better than they were in the T.

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I have been pleased with the performance of the ACC except for one thing. It appears to be overly sensitive to bicycle riders, even if they are far off on the shoulder. When I come up on a bicycle, I often have to hit the gas pedal to keep the car from slowing down. Perhaps the guy who designed the system was an avid cyclist, and wanted to make a statement!

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These functions take a lot of software, computer power and memory and the present cars may not have that. This coming earthquake is about more than self driving cars and some companies may be swamped by the tsunami. Many of them are in a panic trying to catch up. Self driving cars are already here in the Tesla S and to a lesser extent some Volvos, Subarus and some European makes. These are not yet autonomous driverless cars. Google is way ahead in the autonomous software and Tesla is accumulating a million miles of driving data per day in it's fleet of 40,000+ Model S's equipped with the "Autopilot". A recent Tesla software update 7.1 enables the S to be summoned ( on private property ) from it's parking location to you without a driver. It will open a garage door, exit, close the door and drive to you. Those who say these technologies will be here by 2020 or 2025 are going to be left in the dust.

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I didn't realize that Adaptive Cruise Control can only use regen to slow the car. I thought it also used the friction brakes as needed.

It's always been my theory that ACC is nothing more than electronics. Nothing feels mechanical about it. Probably why it can't do a full stop. BTW, I think the collision warning system flashes and beeps when the computer calculates that regenerative braking alone might not be enough, and they've clearly calibrated this warning on the conservative side.

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