Dogtrousers
Kilometre nibbler
Common sense ... But how many drivers with high performance vehicles actually use it , very few, otherwise they wouldn't have bought the vehicle in the first place,

Excellent point.
Common sense ... But how many drivers with high performance vehicles actually use it , very few, otherwise they wouldn't have bought the vehicle in the first place,
Excellent point.
While I agree, I think the problem really is that people don't want those interventions. Most are pretty passive systems, warning but not actually intervening and can easily be ignored. I'd have thought a good majority of cars on the road (say cars post 2015) will have some systems already...but the amount of speeding drivers out there belie the systems effectiveness.
In short, if people want to ignore...its pointless,and clearly a LOT of people disregard their own, let alone others safety.
Personally, the only one on my 2018 Mazda that influences me is speed warnings which I use constantly. it saves looking at the speedo, keeps eyes on the road.
Sadly unless they make the systems active and not possible to override, its pretty mute for a lot of people.
Would I want such intervention ?, .... it perhaps wouldn't bother me too much but I'm a pretty steady driver. Seems I'm in a minority a lot of the time...
I think that some of the 'passive' systems eg ESC, work far more than many drivers realise.
I am a fan of almost all the new tech' on cars. They are far safer vehicles these days, hence the proliferation of 4 & 5 star NCAP ratings on even relatively mundane cars.
The only irritating one on our car is the lane departure warning when on twisty lanes with central road markings. It is easily deactivated though.
People, especially as we get older, often resist change quite forcibly.
No doubt our forebears resisted radial-ply tyres, seat belts, laminated windscreens, heaters, headrests, ABS, PAS, servo-assisted brakes, etc.
And there lies the problem ',easily deactivated'.
Why is that a problem?
The availibilty of manual deactivation is important on lane departure warning systems. It excels at warning of lane drift, or failure to indicate, on major carriageways - its primary design function.
But, on tight twisty lanes, such as here in the Lake District, it can be over-zealous and can become a real distraction. This is simply a function of how the radar system works.
I know that lane departure warning uses GPS, radar, lidar, etc but as AFAIK the on/off function is not linked to GPS location in any production car. I could well be wrong here.
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I like the engine stop/start function in our manual car. It is very unobtrusive, almost to the point of me being unaware that it is functioning at all.
On our Note we have cruise control which I use loads and we have the speed limit option FFS it's a Nissan note
I have stop /start on my car, it's very frustrating to me, I cannot easily delete it, just deactivate it,vits a feature I rarely use, but being a 10 yr old car, it's free of all the other aggravating safety features, but still has passive ones like ABS and traction control , which I could deactivate, but don't.
The Stop/ start does delay the driveability a bit, and also it encourages the use of the footbrake to be used for short stoppages, being an Automatic, a wet boot can slip off, then engages drive,not the best thing,bits also more tiring to have to keep your feet on the brake/ clutch , if you have a manual, the other thing is the rear brake lights are active, causing night vision problems.
I just knock into neutral and put the handbrake on if in heavy traffic, far safer!
Rule 123
The driver and the environment. You MUST NOT leave a parked vehicle unattended with the engine running or leave a vehicle engine running unnecessarily while that vehicle is stationary on a public road.
Generally, if the vehicle is stationary and is likely to remain so for more than a couple of minutes, you should apply the parking brake and switch off the engine to reduce emissions and noise pollution
we should rely on our attentiveness when driving, if you are missing minor things like road positioning ,then you shouldn't be driving.
I like the stop/start on my car, it's saving fuel. I don't know about your car but on mine it adds zero delay. Take foot off brake and engine is running before foot is on accelerator.
Put the handbrake on if worried about feet slipping off the brake. Too tiring to keep foot on brake!If you're stopping for that long you should put it in Park and turn the engine off!
Then you're increasing pollution and wasting fuel, and contravening the spirit if not the letter of Rule 123 by leaving engine running unnecessarily.
And there lies the problem ',easily deactivated'.
I have stop /start on my car, it's very frustrating to me, I cannot easily delete it, just deactivate it,vits a feature I rarely use, but being a 10 yr old car, it's free of all the other aggravating safety features, but still has passive ones like ABS and traction control , which I could deactivate, but don't.
The Stop/ start does delay the driveability a bit, and also it encourages the use of the footbrake to be used for short stoppages, being an Automatic, a wet boot can slip off, then engages drive,not the best thing,bits also more tiring to have to keep your feet on the brake/ clutch , if you have a manual, the other thing is the rear brake lights are active, causing night vision problems.
I just knock into neutral and put the handbrake on if in heavy traffic, far safer!
Certainly on the Mazda, if you have windscreen demist activated, start stop doesn't activate. There will be other parameters as well that dictate if its activated or not. I just turn on demist and set the fan to the lowesr it will go
Why "FFS it's a Nissan Note"?
There isn't a reasonably modern car on the road that will not easily exceed urban speed limits, and even a Note will still easily do more than 70mph.
I used to use cruise control, but have switched to using the speed limiter almost all the time now, particularly in the 20 & 30 limits round here. It isn't ideal on my car, because you don't need to boot it to override, you only need slightly more pressure on the throttle than you would normally use to maintain speed. On my wife's Micra, you do have to really boot it, and I think that is much better.