ACC also stops the car if the one in front stops and prompts to push the go peddle after x seconds when the car in front moves off. If the difference is simply the speed at which each works then that makes senseACC : Keeps the distance to cars in front, can speed up and slow down by itself, trying to get to the selected speed at all times, while still keeping the distance to the car in front.
TJA, will follow the car in front, keep the distance and automatically stop the car, and continue the journey if the car in front moves off. After X seconds it will require you to re-engage to make it go forward.
I love TJA, makes it so effortlessly when driving slow on the motorway, in a line because of some traffic accident.
Makes it almost impossible to bump the car in front if it suddenly comes to a stop.
ACC just does acceleration. You must haveSo there’s no difference then? ACC keeps the car between the lines too
Doesn’t ACC by definition mean it adapts to the speed of the car in front though? Not just accelerationACC just does acceleration. You must have
a) Lane keeping turned on
b) MG Pilot turned on
Yes it does acceleration and braking to stay at a set distance to the vehicle in frontDoesn’t ACC by definition mean it adapts to the speed of the car in front though? Not just acceleration
Thank you! This was the answer I was after. I had read the manual but clearly I missed that bit.The main difference as detailed in the manual between the Driver Aid Systems is that, unlike ACC, Traffic Jam Assist will follow the car in front if it cannot detect the white lane lines.
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So does TJA more closely resemble one pedal driving when driving 50-60 or higher, and then when slowing at e.g traffic lights bring car to a stop rather than slow roll?TJA is like ACC plus it helps steer the car as well. It may be designed for low speeds but it works just as well at 50-60mph (I know as I've used it) and maybe higher.
I don't trust it in round-a-bouts though ?TJA is like ACC plus it helps steer the car as well. It may be designed for low speeds but it works just as well at 50-60mph (I know as I've used it) and maybe higher.
I only use it on good dual carriageways and motorways, anywhere else it can't seem to cope. I still use ACC though as often as I can.I don't trust it in round-a-bouts though ?
I think the police call it "driving without due care and attention" . . . points and a fine if they catch you.has anyone tried hanging a small weight to the steering wheel to see if it stops telling you to hold the wheel?
I see on youtube, a guy jammed an orange into the steering wheel of a tesla and tricked it
I use the double pull of the ACC stalk all the time on motorways it's a bit like Tesla autopilot but not as cleaver, it keeps you centred between the lane marking relatively well and follows the vehicle in front at a set distance according to your speed. Just using ACC alone and the car will bounce from line to line like a yoyo.
Thank you! This was the answer I was after. I had read the manual but clearly I missed that bit.
ACC is dodgy at roundabouts too. I use TJA in preference because it seems to work predictably at all speeds and seems to silence the LKA beepingI don't trust it in round-a-bouts though ?
I think the police call it "driving without due care and attention" . . . points and a fine if they catch you.
I turned LKA off. I found it dangerous when steering with my knee.and seems to silence the LKA beeping