The current version 2 of ADAS can go upto L3 autonomy so well above what we have currently.Is monthly subscription going to remain $50? Most probably not as more capabilities are added.
How much sw upgrades and features can Gen 2 hardware take.
it really dose shine in stop and go. total y removes the stress. used it in the Philly area coming north and it managed through the 95 to 476 exchange flawlessly. it did have some issues further north on 476 where there is ton of construction and the road lines aren't there anymore. I took it off, drove the 2 mins through the constructions zone where they are removing the toll booths and it drove me th rest of the way home, twice now...also use it for driving on 22 here in the Lehigh valley and it manages the stop and go as well as the 25>55>35>20>45... very well also. on the hw I usually set it to medium, but for stop and go and heavy hw traffic I set it to spicy, just to keep the gaps a little tighter and the response to the person in front moving a little closer to what I would do...Well I haven't tried it in stop and go cause I didn't trust it..... Can you elaborate on how well that works? Trying to decide if it's worth it to pay, and I admit on the open highway it's really nice
What version of FSD have you used? Hate to be that guy, but it really is a world of a difference depending on the hardware or version being used.Am I the only owner that gives nearly zero craps about autonomy? At almost all levels beyond adaptive cruise I could, quite literally, not care less.
Am I missing something spectacular in the experience of using it?
All of the FSD Tesla, and Driver+ miles I've driven have just felt like moving the workload from "driving" to "monitoring the system that is driving". I never felt like there was enough trust gained to actually reduce the drivers workload.
Maybe I'm just a luddite?!?!
So, two things here.What version of FSD have you used? Hate to be that guy, but it really is a world of a difference depending on the hardware or version being used.
Personally, something like FSD takes a huge mental load off. I love to drive. I'm a driver first. But do I love endless highway traffic or bumper to bumper commuting? No. That is where FSD comes in.
Version 14 is IMO "good enough". People's milage may vary, but it has my trust. I'm not stressing it or babysitting it while it does its thing. It is certainly a value add. We had V13 briefly and was definitely babysitting the car more then. V14 feels a lot more confident, but still not perfect.
If Rivian can do point to point driving in a similar manner, then $2,500 is an absolute steal, though I doubt this price will stick once more improvements come.
Do you guys not get phantom braking? I used it on a 14hr round trip, all highway, 2026 R1T. The number of times it decided to slam on the brake because there is 18 wheeler going slow on the right, or who knows why, was so frequent my wife made me turn it off. It was giving panic attacks its so abrupt.What about it sucks? I have used it all the time and it has only gotten better after each release. I am not really there with turn by turn 'FSD' but for the highway and putzing around town it is fantastic.
Maybe once or twice no more or less than my Audi A7 with its system before I traded it in.Do you guys not get phantom braking? I used it on a 14hr round trip, all highway, 2026 R1T. The number of times it decided to slam on the brake because there is 18 wheeler going slow on the right, or who knows why, was so frequent my wife made me turn it off. It was giving panic attacks its so abrupt.
My Tesla X and Volvo EX90 stopped phantom breaking in like 2020.....I ain't paying for that. I really like my R1T but I'm not paying for beta software with promises.Maybe once or twice no more or less than my Audi A7 with its system before I traded it in.
Other than the lane changing, what you're describing sounds like all you need is a lane keeping/centering feature and adaptive cruise control. Most vehicles (EV or otherwise) have these features standard.Sure thing - from my perspective, it's very solid, and I really like how Rivian's system allows for some driver input/guidance without suddenly disengaging entirely, allowing you to partner up with the vehicle.
And keep in mind, Rivian isn't doing Point-to-Point navigation yet, so this is mostly very intelligent lane keeping, speed sensing, lane changing when prompted, etc. I frequently have to drive between cities, there and back in a day, so the fatigue/cramps from that much time in the car is real. The updates they've dropped in the past six months make it such that I get on the highway, turn on autonomy and let the car handle lane and speed when going through rush hour traffic (Houston is terrible!). It relieves me from the stop and start, keeping pressure on the accelerator, etc.
The updates they dropped after autonomy day made this all possible - a year ago, this only worked on a very small set of pre-mapped roads.
Initially that i can count with fingers on one hand but not anymore and just slowing down (than slamming) in a few spots now. I haven’t had it as bad as Tesla a few years back. I also haven’t experienced any sudden swerving in rivian as tesla did very dangerously even in busy roads and intersections.Do you guys not get phantom braking? I used it on a 14hr round trip, all highway, 2026 R1T. The number of times it decided to slam on the brake because there is 18 wheeler going slow on the right, or who knows why, was so frequent my wife made me turn it off. It was giving panic attacks its so abrupt.