Sponsored

Driver+ Not up to current Spec - A Deal Breaker (?)

mgc0216

Well-Known Member
First Name
Mike
Joined
Oct 5, 2021
Threads
19
Messages
1,022
Reaction score
1,919
Location
Oregon
Vehicles
R1T, BMW R1200RT, BMW F800GS
Occupation
Software guy
Clubs
 
You can turn it off. It's not like you have to use it. You may not care about lane centering, but I would bet the majority of buyers expect it, especially at this price point.
i would bet the majority of buyers don't even know what "lane centering" is. I don't - is it different than lane keep assist?

In any case - i haven't had anything more advanced than lane keep assist, auto cruise control, and front and rear assisted braking. If the truck did those things, everything else is gravy in my book.
Sponsored

 

astonius

Well-Known Member
Joined
Oct 5, 2021
Threads
53
Messages
1,434
Reaction score
3,060
Location
US
Vehicles
Cars
i would bet the majority of buyers don't even know what "lane centering" is. I don't - is it different than lane keep assist?

In any case - i haven't had anything more advanced than lane keep assist, auto cruise control, and front and rear assisted braking. If the truck did those things, everything else is gravy in my book.
It's lane keep that doesn't ping-pong and auto-steers to a point. It won't take full-blown turns, but it will take curves.

Also, my understanding is by your standard Rivian is not gravy at the moment. There's no lane keep on unmapped roads, only blind spot monitoring.
 
OP
OP
rraj2k81

rraj2k81

Well-Known Member
Joined
Apr 25, 2021
Threads
68
Messages
762
Reaction score
1,126
Location
Burlington, Ontario.
Vehicles
2022 Tesla Model S LR
i would bet the majority of buyers don't even know what "lane centering" is. I don't - is it different than lane keep assist?

In any case - i haven't had anything more advanced than lane keep assist, auto cruise control, and front and rear assisted braking. If the truck did those things, everything else is gravy in my book.
There is a lot of confusion when it comes to Lane Centering. Essentially there are two different systems,

1. The most basic system is the one that does not let you drift from your lanes. These are the systems that you have to do the steering, but in the off chance you steer away from the lines, the system will put some torque on the steering the pull you back inside the lanes.

Most often these systems are called 'Lane Keep Assist' or some to that extent. But they also use it for some lane centering systems, which causes confusion.
These are the ping pong systems, which feels like you are bouncing between lines.

2. The upgraded one is where the car actively steers your car to keep it centered. So the ADAS system steers the car to keep it in the lane. Most of them are hands on systems, while Blue Cruise and Super Cruise go hands free when you are on HWYs that are mapped in the systems database.
 
OP
OP
rraj2k81

rraj2k81

Well-Known Member
Joined
Apr 25, 2021
Threads
68
Messages
762
Reaction score
1,126
Location
Burlington, Ontario.
Vehicles
2022 Tesla Model S LR
Just so everyone is clear. It's not that I do not care about the feature in general. I don't care about it in a Rivian. Call me old skool all anyone wants, but like to drive myself in a vehicle like that, not be driving by it (even as something as simple as lane centering. Having something as simple as that makes one a lazy driver depending too much on tech, dulling one's own senses and intuition). If I had a Merc EQS or a Lucid, I'd definitely expect that feature and would make use of it no question.
Like you, I enjoy driving a lot. I have done a lot of road trips, where I have been on a lot of back country roads, where I set my drive mode to dynamic put the car on manual shifting and rip my supercharge V6 S4, which I plan to keep once I get the new vehicle.

But on the same token 90% percent of my driving is commuting to work and HWY road trips. Every year I drive about 1200KMs at least twice, to Montreal. And on all of those trips I would like an ADAS system that would help me just cruise the long boring HWYs.

And this is something I would be doing on a Rivian or any other vehicle. So at the very minimum I would like an ADAS, that can do adaptive cruise and lane centering.
 

hola29

Well-Known Member
Joined
Sep 15, 2019
Threads
1
Messages
246
Reaction score
266
Location
USA
Vehicles
R1S
Hmm…They literally just started shipping a v1.0 product as an absolute startup. Your expectations were obviously not set properly and you are correct, likely not a fit.

As per the original description, Driver+ would only be available in certain HWYs (mapped routes), which would enable Auto Steer/Lane Centering with Adaptive Cruise Control. Which I thought was a very limited system and had thought would be upgraded when in production to be in line with all the current ADAS implementations.

Driver+.jpg


But now seeing all the reviews I am kind of disappointed that they stuck to their original version, and when you compare it to most if not all the ADAS implementations, Driver+ is outdated. The fact that it is only a Dynamic Cruise Control on all roads is no better than what I have in my 10-year-old car.

For comparison, here is what is out in the market right now,

ADAS SystemAutosteer/Lane CenteringAdaptive Cruise ControlLane ChangesHands Free
Tesla AutopilotXX--
Tesla Autopilot w FSDXXX-
BMW Driver ProfessionalXXX-
Ford Co-Pilot 360XX--
Ford CP360 w Blue CruiseXX-X (Limited to mapped HWY)
Polestar Pilot AssistXX--
Hyundai/KIA HDAXX--
Hyundai/KIA HDA2XXX (Mapped HWY)-
Rivian-X--
Rivian Driver+X (Limited to mapped HWY)X--

Based on this Rivian is the least advanced ADAS system on the market and personally for me this is a big deal breaker, because one of the technological advancements I am looking for in my next car is an advanced ADAS system, and at the moment Rivian is not it.

Feels like Rivian built this system to be hands free from grounds up, but like everything Rivian they did not execute this plan, so instead of planning on developing the 'true' hands free tech (internal cameras, sensors to monitor eye/head placement), they delayed it, kept the Autosteer/Lane Centering, and limited it to mapped HWYs.

Hopefully, since I am not expected to get my R1S till 2023, I am really hoping they make upgrades to Driver+, or at least disable the 'Mapped' HWY restriction for Autosteer and allow it for all roads.

Does anyone feel like Driver+ is very limited or is everyone OK with it as is?

I do not like buying vehicles with 'future feature' promises and buy them based on what is being offered when I buy it.
Because there is no guarantee when these features would be made available or when they would be made available.
 
  • Like
Reactions: Guy

Sponsored

COdogman

Well-Known Member
First Name
Brian
Joined
Jan 21, 2022
Threads
29
Messages
7,516
Reaction score
20,263
Location
Colorado
Vehicles
2023 R1T
Occupation
Dog Wrangler
I have experience with Tesla autopilot and Ford copilot 360 assist. Both systems work great on the freeway. Nothing oversold about them at all. Blue cruise I haven't tried, but from videos I've seen it's coming along well.
That’s actually good to hear. I have not tried anything more advanced than Honda’s adaptive cruise control, so I’m basing my opinion on articles or accounts that I read in aggregate. I know Tesla has taken some heat for the way they market autopilot, but I also read about lots of idiots who do things they know they shouldn’t do with it…like get in the back seat and crash their car :facepalm:
 

ironpig

Well-Known Member
Joined
Nov 19, 2021
Threads
7
Messages
1,974
Reaction score
3,358
Location
Los Angeles, CA
Vehicles
2022 R1T LE, 2015 4Runner, 1975 FJ55 Land Cruiser
I do not care about cars driving themselves. Especially not my off road truck. This is the least interesting feature of the car.
 

lmr

Well-Known Member
First Name
Lane
Joined
Jan 5, 2022
Threads
0
Messages
120
Reaction score
140
Location
Greater Portland, OR
Vehicles
VW Passat B7, Rivian R1S
Occupation
Technical Product Management
Clubs
 
All I want is adaptive cruise control for long road trips and stop&go traffic situations, the rest of it, I don't really care about.
 

Engi_Nerd

Well-Known Member
Joined
Jul 21, 2021
Threads
6
Messages
224
Reaction score
431
Location
Western NY
Vehicles
Model Y LR, Alfa Romeo Giulia
I daily drive both my Alfa that has zero driver assist tech, and wife's Model Y, that has the full suite. As much as I enjoy my fun car being simple, the quality of life improvement for having Autopilot on long, boring, traffic-filled family trips cannot be overstated. There is nothing manly, skilled, or smart about having to make hours of micro-corrections just to keep your vehicle between the lines on a long, straight road. Having the car do this actually frees up more concentration bandwidth so you can be more situationally aware of what's going on around you. Basic lane centering is not new technology and there's really no excuse for the way Rivian currently has it geo-fenced. Given their capacitive steering wheel sensor, they should be allowing hands-on lane centering on all divided highways, at a minimum. I would have thought the geofencing should come into play for hands-off operation, where the cameras are gaze tracking to make sure you're engaged.

I personally think full autonomous is way harder than most companies let on, and no vehicle currently on the road has the sensors and computational capacity to offer robust Level4. We might start to see it with Tesla's HW4, but I don't think Rivian will be super competitive in this space for a long while. Nor do they necessarily need to be, so long as they have bulletproof Level 2, and a path to robust level 3.

My EDD is end of this year. While I'm willing to make compromises on charging speed and network availability, I don't think I'll be taking delivery unless Driver+ is more akin to Autopilot by then. I would be very curious to see if Rivian will publish a technology roadmap to help explain the current limitations.
 
Last edited:

Ventura

Well-Known Member
Joined
Sep 3, 2021
Threads
1
Messages
126
Reaction score
264
Location
Ventura County, California
Vehicles
R1T Red Canyon 20" / Prius
I like driving. I'm ok with adaptive cruise control, but I don't want anything else and would simply turn it off. I simply haven't used any available features in the past. I'm with those who find Driver+ (and certainly self driving) the least interesting thing a car offers. Of course I'm happy companies are working on it - if it gets good enough maybe I can keep driving when I'm old and my license is revoked.
 

Sponsored

ERguy

Well-Known Member
Joined
Feb 17, 2021
Threads
2
Messages
308
Reaction score
464
Location
Midwest
Vehicles
F150
Hmm…They literally just started shipping a v1.0 product as an absolute startup. Your expectations were obviously not set properly and you are correct, likely not a fit.
I disagree. Rivian set the expectations.

Have you read about Driver+ lately? The website clearly states it is a "hands free" system. The phrasing is important.

It does not say that it "will" be hands free... Or that it will be"upgraded" or "improved" to hands free. The website says it "delivers" a hands free system and comes standard on every vehicle.

You can't blame customers for being disappointed that Rivian set the expectation.

At the very least, Rivian should update the website to be more accurate.

Rivian R1T R1S Driver+ Not up to current Spec - A Deal Breaker (?) Screenshot_20220313-092933
 

KingTodd

Well-Known Member
First Name
Mike
Joined
Aug 14, 2021
Threads
4
Messages
433
Reaction score
594
Location
PA
Vehicles
Subaru
"Based on this Rivian is the least advanced ADAS system on the market and personally for me this is a big deal breaker,"

If it is a deal breaker, then you cancelled your order by now, right?

I didnt read through 3 pages of posts, but that seems like what you said the outcome should be....so is it?
 

CommodoreAmiga

Well-Known Member
Joined
Dec 30, 2020
Threads
39
Messages
4,104
Reaction score
7,710
Location
INACTIVE
Vehicles
INACTIVE
Just so everyone is clear. It's not that I do not care about the feature in general. I don't care about it in a Rivian. Call me old skool all anyone wants, but like to drive myself in a vehicle like that, not be driving by it (even as something as simple as lane centering. Having something as simple as that makes one a lazy driver depending too much on tech, dulling one's own senses and intuition). If I had a Merc EQS or a Lucid, I'd definitely expect that feature and would make use of it no question.
Science does not agree with you. ACC+LKAS has proven to keep people responsive longer on journeys. It’s amazing how reducing fatigue just a little keeps reaction times from being impacted.
 

Toadkillerdog

Well-Known Member
First Name
Robert
Joined
Sep 29, 2021
Threads
3
Messages
104
Reaction score
160
Location
Green Bay, WI
Vehicles
2010 Porsche Panamera Turbo, 2020 Subaru Outback
Occupation
Physician
"Based on this Rivian is the least advanced ADAS system on the market and personally for me this is a big deal breaker,"

If it is a deal breaker, then you cancelled your order by now, right?

I didnt read through 3 pages of posts, but that seems like what you said the outcome should be....so is it?
Give the guy a break. He is disappointed with a less than advertised and important to him function. I believe he said that they had a year or two to fix this before he needs to take delivery.
 

Davethadog

Well-Known Member
First Name
YaMa
Joined
Jul 15, 2021
Threads
16
Messages
456
Reaction score
915
Location
Denver
Vehicles
Trucks, bikes, excavators
Meh, I don’t care. Poor implementation is worse than none. Adaptive cruise control is great but I find the lane keeping features to be only quasi-capable gimmicks.

Also, to correct your chart, my polestar 2 changes lanes with pilot.
Sponsored

 
 




Top