โMar-18-2018 11:37 AM
โMar-19-2018 08:25 AM
camp-n-family wrote:ScottG wrote:camp-n-family wrote:ScottG wrote:
Had a similar thing happen with our Challenger SRT. I had CC set and I was slowly passing a semi on the interstate in a torrential down poor. As my car got up almost even with the front of the semi, I was hit with a massive "bow wave" of water off the truck. The car read this as a solid wall and applied the brakes, which kept me in the wall of water until I pumped the accelerator.
That was a bit unnerving but I like the system and I'm glad it is so equipped.
On a similar note, the next truck I buy will have adaptive CC as well. If Ram doesn't have it I will buy the Ford.
You should never use CC in rain or slippery conditions. Hydroplaning or any loss of traction can cause the CC to react and cause a loss of control. There are warnings in your owners manual.
Great. I'll nominate you for internet Mommy of the year.
Apparently you still need one. You do exactly what the manual advises you against and then complain that it put you in a dangerous situation :S Didn't your momma teach you anything?
โMar-19-2018 07:37 AM
LanceRKeys wrote:austingta wrote:
It's really not fair that the guy that didn't hit you is called slow or lolly-gagging when perhaps he just doesn't follow too closely.
This I agree with, sounds like he was driving responsibly, and yet he is talked down about it, I donโt understand the point in that.
โMar-19-2018 05:18 AM
austingta wrote:
It's really not fair that the guy that didn't hit you is called slow or lolly-gagging when perhaps he just doesn't follow too closely.
โMar-19-2018 04:48 AM
โMar-19-2018 04:05 AM
brulaz wrote:4x4ord wrote:
About three weeks ago my daughter was creamed from behind while stpopped on the road waiting for an oncoming truck before making a left-hand turn. Luckily the truck just passed and she had begun moving when she was struck at full speed from behind. Witnesses say the SUV that struck her car never even started to slow down. Too bad that SUV didn't have the fcw system.
Same happened to me 25 years ago. Drunk driver. These days they are prolly texting.
There are people out there that shouldn't be driving. But they claim a "right" to do so. Maybe these new technologies will help. Certainly seat belts, airbags, traction control and ABS have helped, although you still hear people complaining about them.
And yes, I hope your daughter is ok.
โMar-19-2018 03:35 AM
ScottG wrote:camp-n-family wrote:ScottG wrote:
Had a similar thing happen with our Challenger SRT. I had CC set and I was slowly passing a semi on the interstate in a torrential down poor. As my car got up almost even with the front of the semi, I was hit with a massive "bow wave" of water off the truck. The car read this as a solid wall and applied the brakes, which kept me in the wall of water until I pumped the accelerator.
That was a bit unnerving but I like the system and I'm glad it is so equipped.
On a similar note, the next truck I buy will have adaptive CC as well. If Ram doesn't have it I will buy the Ford.
You should never use CC in rain or slippery conditions. Hydroplaning or any loss of traction can cause the CC to react and cause a loss of control. There are warnings in your owners manual.
Great. I'll nominate you for internet Mommy of the year.
โMar-19-2018 03:27 AM
โMar-18-2018 10:27 PM
ScottG wrote:brulaz wrote:
So does FCA still work when a trailer is attached?
Wouldn't mind a Warning but hitting the brakes might not work out well.
My Challenger only hits the brakes when the adaptive cruise is on. If not then it just advises "BRAKE!!!".
โMar-18-2018 10:18 PM
mich800 wrote:Grit dog wrote:
Seems appropriate here. Had an interesting experience with our new Charger yesterday with FCW and active braking.
In short, the car totally mis read a traffic situation and the 6 piston brembos stopped the car dead in its tracks...way quicker than the car behind us could have stopped. Luckily the driver behind us had given adequate (too much actually for city traffic) room in front of him, or that collision avoidance system would have 100% caused a collision.
Word of caution for anyone with newer vehicles with this system.
I have had those situations also with the FCA collision avoidance. Was there nothing in the path or did it just activate even though you had adequate distance?
โMar-18-2018 10:09 PM
wnjj wrote:drsteve wrote:
For those who worry about the fact that these systems will never be perfect, the question is, will their failure rate be better or worse than that of the average human?
The failure rate on the automatic system will always be higher than the perfect drivers on the internet.
โMar-18-2018 10:05 PM
camp-n-family wrote:ScottG wrote:
Had a similar thing happen with our Challenger SRT. I had CC set and I was slowly passing a semi on the interstate in a torrential down poor. As my car got up almost even with the front of the semi, I was hit with a massive "bow wave" of water off the truck. The car read this as a solid wall and applied the brakes, which kept me in the wall of water until I pumped the accelerator.
That was a bit unnerving but I like the system and I'm glad it is so equipped.
On a similar note, the next truck I buy will have adaptive CC as well. If Ram doesn't have it I will buy the Ford.
You should never use CC in rain or slippery conditions. Hydroplaning or any loss of traction can cause the CC to react and cause a loss of control. There are warnings in your owners manual.
โMar-18-2018 09:55 PM
drsteve wrote:
For those who worry about the fact that these systems will never be perfect, the question is, will their failure rate be better or worse than that of the average human?
โMar-18-2018 06:22 PM
camp-n-family wrote:ScottG wrote:
Had a similar thing happen with our Challenger SRT. I had CC set and I was slowly passing a semi on the interstate in a torrential down poor. As my car got up almost even with the front of the semi, I was hit with a massive "bow wave" of water off the truck. The car read this as a solid wall and applied the brakes, which kept me in the wall of water until I pumped the accelerator.
That was a bit unnerving but I like the system and I'm glad it is so equipped.
On a similar note, the next truck I buy will have adaptive CC as well. If Ram doesn't have it I will buy the Ford.
You should never use CC in rain or slippery conditions. Hydroplaning or any loss of traction can cause the CC to react and cause a loss of control. There are warnings in your owners manual.
โMar-18-2018 06:19 PM
โMar-18-2018 06:10 PM
ScottG wrote:
Had a similar thing happen with our Challenger SRT. I had CC set and I was slowly passing a semi on the interstate in a torrential down poor. As my car got up almost even with the front of the semi, I was hit with a massive "bow wave" of water off the truck. The car read this as a solid wall and applied the brakes, which kept me in the wall of water until I pumped the accelerator.
That was a bit unnerving but I like the system and I'm glad it is so equipped.
On a similar note, the next truck I buy will have adaptive CC as well. If Ram doesn't have it I will buy the Ford.