About damn time this was offered in a vehicle other than a top-line Mercedes. I hope this trickles down into even low spec cars soon - I am sick and tired of having to deal with boy ricers tailgating.
Yeah seriously, if you've been driving long enough to own one of these that "feature" is just second nature to you. Hell, I've got a learner's permit and I've only been on the road for 30-some hours and it's second nature to me by now :P
I have an G35. It has ICC (Intelligent Cruise Control) which, while the cruise control is activated, will keep you certain distanced away from the car in front of you. You can choose between roughly 3 - 6 car distances away from the car ahead of you. This is handy on road trips. If the speed limit is 75 and the flow of traffic is 85, i can set the cruise control to 100mph and never ever have to touch the gas or the brake pedal. This allows me to exactly pace the speed of the car in front of me while opening up for high speed driving when nobody is around. All this while only having to operate the steering wheel.
you all dont get it, this has nothing to do with cruise control. the car will apply the brake for you when you are in stop and go traffic. all you have to do is lift your foot off the gas and the car will come to a complete stop by itself. i'm not a huge infinity fan but they are the only ones that have implemented this tech.
"DCA is the first system ever to utilize the accelerator pedal to provide feedback to the driver." I think this is what they were toting as a first. The pedal feedback system, not the actual system. Clever wording by the Marketing folks.
Yea, yea, yea, that’s cool and all but what intrigues me the most is that HEALING PAINT SYSTEM (i.e. a day in the sun automatically "heals" all swirls, minor scratches etc.). Now lets get the same paint treatment on that 2009 R35 Skyline ASAP! At that price, tis a damn shame it doesn’t already have it! Just sayin...
Those who hate tailgating will not like this technology, as it follows more closely than most people would. Why? Because its response time is much, much faster than yours. However, this is a very very good thing, as most traffic isn't caused by more cars than the road can handle, its caused by human drivers overbraking, which this system won't do. The statistic I read is that if 1/4 cars had this active cruise control system, traffic would be reduced by 50%
Eventually, as the nation becomes dumber. We will be buying cars that simply drive themselves. Cup holders will remain and a few new features will be introduced - a slobber bucket, bucket seats with built in toilets with automatic asswipers, a food detecting microwave which will detect what type of food you put into it and nuke it accordingly, a vanity mirror (for the women to apply their make-up of course), a table and a bib to soak up coffee/soup spills and catch donut or egg McMuffin crumbs.
Does this mean we have to re-live the 20 years of auto journalists bitching about peadal pulsation when a safety feature is activated? Remember when every single car journalist bitched how ABS pulsated when activated? We are going to live through another 20 years of car journalists 'testing' a vehicle by driving 6 inches off the bumper in front of them, bitching the whole time that the gas pedal is vibrating. Kill me now.
well citroen and renault in europe have that also in some models, even the detection if you cruise the center line too slow it vibrates to warn that you are "in sleep mode" even the follow the road lights was invented by porche, but they don't need comercials to show what they have, only "small" companies need to show off what they have to make you think they are the 1st.
This was out even before all of these cars and models all of you are mentioning. Look up an old company called Autostop... they had a system that they tried out way before the 80's that had cars that could follow others, predict collisions, route trajectories, and projectively follow a forward target in autopilot.
Reader Comments (Page 1 of 1)
Twitchy @ Apr 21st 2008 7:49AM
About damn time this was offered in a vehicle other than a top-line Mercedes. I hope this trickles down into even low spec cars soon - I am sick and tired of having to deal with boy ricers tailgating.
frankXchange @ Apr 21st 2008 7:56AM
They know their market segment - rich people who can't drive.
John @ Apr 21st 2008 7:57AM
I believe even Volkswagen offers this in many of their models, they call it Front Assist.
http://www.volkswagen.com/vwcms_publish/vwcms/master_public/virtualmaster/en2/experience/innovation/driver_assistance_systems/start.html
wickedpheonix @ Apr 21st 2008 7:58AM
Yeah seriously, if you've been driving long enough to own one of these that "feature" is just second nature to you. Hell, I've got a learner's permit and I've only been on the road for 30-some hours and it's second nature to me by now :P
chad @ Apr 21st 2008 8:02AM
I have an G35. It has ICC (Intelligent Cruise Control) which, while the cruise control is activated, will keep you certain distanced away from the car in front of you. You can choose between roughly 3 - 6 car distances away from the car ahead of you. This is handy on road trips. If the speed limit is 75 and the flow of traffic is 85, i can set the cruise control to 100mph and never ever have to touch the gas or the brake pedal. This allows me to exactly pace the speed of the car in front of me while opening up for high speed driving when nobody is around. All this while only having to operate the steering wheel.
Go Infiniti!
Thomas @ Apr 21st 2008 8:58AM
Tech ++ == Driving Skill --
Sadly too many crappy drivers on the road who need need to eat their donut and coffee while those tech will help them alot.
rickP @ Apr 21st 2008 8:42AM
Um, BMW has had Active Cruise Stop and Go for quite a while. You put in the desired speed and it will maintain it as long as nothing is in the way including full stops.
http://www.bmw.com/com/en/newvehicles/5series/touring/2007/allfacts/ergonomics/acc_stop.html
ronnie jones @ Apr 21st 2008 8:58AM
you all dont get it, this has nothing to do with cruise control. the car will apply the brake for you when you are in stop and go traffic. all you have to do is lift your foot off the gas and the car will come to a complete stop by itself. i'm not a huge infinity fan but they are the only ones that have implemented this tech.
carguy84 @ Apr 21st 2008 9:30AM
"DCA is the first system ever to utilize the accelerator pedal to provide feedback to the driver."
I think this is what they were toting as a first. The pedal feedback system, not the actual system. Clever wording by the Marketing folks.
Frankenstein Black @ Apr 21st 2008 12:45PM
Yea, yea, yea, that’s cool and all but what intrigues me the most is that HEALING PAINT SYSTEM (i.e. a day in the sun automatically "heals" all swirls, minor scratches etc.). Now lets get the same paint treatment on that 2009 R35 Skyline ASAP! At that price, tis a damn shame it doesn’t already have it! Just sayin...
tyecies @ Apr 21st 2008 12:46PM
Those who hate tailgating will not like this technology, as it follows more closely than most people would. Why? Because its response time is much, much faster than yours. However, this is a very very good thing, as most traffic isn't caused by more cars than the road can handle, its caused by human drivers overbraking, which this system won't do. The statistic I read is that if 1/4 cars had this active cruise control system, traffic would be reduced by 50%
Valgas @ Apr 21st 2008 12:56PM
Eventually, as the nation becomes dumber. We will be buying cars that simply drive themselves. Cup holders will remain and a few new features will be introduced - a slobber bucket, bucket seats with built in toilets with automatic asswipers, a food detecting microwave which will detect what type of food you put into it and nuke it accordingly, a vanity mirror (for the women to apply their make-up of course), a table and a bib to soak up coffee/soup spills and catch donut or egg McMuffin crumbs.
Chris in CA @ Apr 21st 2008 12:57PM
Does this mean we have to re-live the 20 years of auto journalists bitching about peadal pulsation when a safety feature is activated? Remember when every single car journalist bitched how ABS pulsated when activated? We are going to live through another 20 years of car journalists 'testing' a vehicle by driving 6 inches off the bumper in front of them, bitching the whole time that the gas pedal is vibrating. Kill me now.
fashionista @ Apr 21st 2008 1:05PM
All that's missing is a AI, since anyone who would buy this heinous turdmobile obviously needs a brain.
SeVeMaS @ Apr 21st 2008 9:28PM
well citroen and renault in europe have that also in some models, even the detection if you cruise the center line too slow it vibrates to warn that you are "in sleep mode" even the follow the road lights was invented by porche, but they don't need comercials to show what they have, only "small" companies need to show off what they have to make you think they are the 1st.
and so on so on
Silivrenion @ Apr 22nd 2008 1:15AM
This was out even before all of these cars and models all of you are mentioning. Look up an old company called Autostop... they had a system that they tried out way before the 80's that had cars that could follow others, predict collisions, route trajectories, and projectively follow a forward target in autopilot.
Def not the first.
anny @ Apr 29th 2008 2:56PM
que precio tiene la infiniti fx 35
anny @ Apr 29th 2008 3:03PM
que precio cuesta la infiniti fx 35 2009 quiero saber su precio