Hank42
Well-known member
- Thread starter
- #1
I just came back from another long road trip with BluesClues, and I have finally come to the following conclusion:
"I'm glad I'm not paying for this turd"
The tech works pretty well - I have no complaints with it holding the lane for hundreds of miles, or accommodating other vehicles that merge into my lane. It's pretty good about that, and I like that I can lane shift without fighting the wheel.
My main issue comes down to how Ford chose to notify the driver of various factors related to safety. The nags about "watch the road" and "keep your hands on the wheel" are well known. They get your attention for certain. Over all this time driving with it, I find the "watch the road" nags to have a counter safety effect - often I'm looking at the map to identify a route or find some other piece of information that is needed to aid in my journey. I find that instead of getting the information I need, I respond to the alert and stare at the road long enough for the alarm to go away and then I have to reset my focus back on the console to find the information I was looking for - often 3-4 times. That is even more time spent with my eyes off the road, and more importantly, my focus and attention is shattered having to task switch so many times - the opposite intent of the warning. I know this has been beaten to death from a complaint standpoint, but the more I use it, the more I dislike it, and the more I feel less safe when responding to the nags.
My next complaint is kind of the opposite - there are NO nags when there probably should be in some circumstances.
When driving long distances with BlueClues engaged, there are points when it disengages with seemingly no warning - sure, a small "ding" might be heard - if you're paying attention for it over conversation, or a good song on the radio. And you might catch blue on blue "hands free" icon on the speedo screen fade away - but only if you're looking at it, but you're probably not, because you've been conditioned by the nags to "keep your eyes on the road". This is scary when you realize the truck is not following that curve the way you'd expect and you take over and realize it disengaged and you missed the notification. I get the whole "Blue" theme, but at the very least, make that hands-free icon a different color, or shape or something when engaged vs disengaged - something that I can see with my peripheral vision (because - I'm not allowed to take my eyes off the road !)
Same behavior when changing lanes - yes, I know it disengages when I change lanes, but there's no decent feedback (without staring at the dash, something we're not supposed to do!) when it has re-engaged in the new lane.
I actually would prefer to be "nagged" with the same zeal of "keep your on the road" when it does disengage (I understand why it drops out in certain places.)
And as much as I don't want to bring the T-word into this, Tesla's approach with nags is more effective - starts off with a gentle silent visual suggestion for the driver, and then escalates the more time you spend being non-compliant ending up with audible alerts and finally a major warning for all the occupants in the vehicle to hear and perhaps take action.
"I'm glad I'm not paying for this turd"
The tech works pretty well - I have no complaints with it holding the lane for hundreds of miles, or accommodating other vehicles that merge into my lane. It's pretty good about that, and I like that I can lane shift without fighting the wheel.
My main issue comes down to how Ford chose to notify the driver of various factors related to safety. The nags about "watch the road" and "keep your hands on the wheel" are well known. They get your attention for certain. Over all this time driving with it, I find the "watch the road" nags to have a counter safety effect - often I'm looking at the map to identify a route or find some other piece of information that is needed to aid in my journey. I find that instead of getting the information I need, I respond to the alert and stare at the road long enough for the alarm to go away and then I have to reset my focus back on the console to find the information I was looking for - often 3-4 times. That is even more time spent with my eyes off the road, and more importantly, my focus and attention is shattered having to task switch so many times - the opposite intent of the warning. I know this has been beaten to death from a complaint standpoint, but the more I use it, the more I dislike it, and the more I feel less safe when responding to the nags.
My next complaint is kind of the opposite - there are NO nags when there probably should be in some circumstances.
When driving long distances with BlueClues engaged, there are points when it disengages with seemingly no warning - sure, a small "ding" might be heard - if you're paying attention for it over conversation, or a good song on the radio. And you might catch blue on blue "hands free" icon on the speedo screen fade away - but only if you're looking at it, but you're probably not, because you've been conditioned by the nags to "keep your eyes on the road". This is scary when you realize the truck is not following that curve the way you'd expect and you take over and realize it disengaged and you missed the notification. I get the whole "Blue" theme, but at the very least, make that hands-free icon a different color, or shape or something when engaged vs disengaged - something that I can see with my peripheral vision (because - I'm not allowed to take my eyes off the road !)
Same behavior when changing lanes - yes, I know it disengages when I change lanes, but there's no decent feedback (without staring at the dash, something we're not supposed to do!) when it has re-engaged in the new lane.
I actually would prefer to be "nagged" with the same zeal of "keep your on the road" when it does disengage (I understand why it drops out in certain places.)
And as much as I don't want to bring the T-word into this, Tesla's approach with nags is more effective - starts off with a gentle silent visual suggestion for the driver, and then escalates the more time you spend being non-compliant ending up with audible alerts and finally a major warning for all the occupants in the vehicle to hear and perhaps take action.
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