Mal
Well-known member
- First Name
- Mal
- Joined
- Feb 13, 2024
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- WA
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- Foundation CB "Rocinante"
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I've seen a number of threads complaining about FSD in these forums, so I thought I'd take a contrarian approach and report on the excellent experience we just had on a weekend road trip.
Most of the drive was winding two-lane roads, getting to and including the PCH between Lincoln City and Florence on the coast. FSD did great for us, and I'd say it did > 90% of the driving. I did have two interventions that I supposed would be considered critical: One where it was trying to make a left into a parking lot, and mistook the oncoming traffic lane as a turn lane. And a second where I had it driving in a state park, and it wanted to use the entire (unpainted) access road as it's own lane. So, blind corners would have been a problem.
But, like, I just grabbed the wheel and corrected it. I really don't get all the teeth-gnashing. As long as you're paying attention, it's not very hard to correct. FSD is a game changer.
Anyway, some observations:
Most of the drive was winding two-lane roads, getting to and including the PCH between Lincoln City and Florence on the coast. FSD did great for us, and I'd say it did > 90% of the driving. I did have two interventions that I supposed would be considered critical: One where it was trying to make a left into a parking lot, and mistook the oncoming traffic lane as a turn lane. And a second where I had it driving in a state park, and it wanted to use the entire (unpainted) access road as it's own lane. So, blind corners would have been a problem.
But, like, I just grabbed the wheel and corrected it. I really don't get all the teeth-gnashing. As long as you're paying attention, it's not very hard to correct. FSD is a game changer.
Anyway, some observations:
- My wife gets motion sick. She noted that, with FSD driving, the road trip was much more pleasant for her. I think it's because I can be a somewhat aggressive driver, and FSD (standard mode) is not. So there are fewer abrupt movements, which are more likely to trigger her motion sickness. She also noted that I mutter a lot less when FSD is in charge.
- In general, FSD was incredibly smooth on all of the sweepers and tighter curves. I never felt like it was going to cross the centerline. Stopping and dealing with in-town traffic was super smooth. Passing cars on the highway was generally good, though it would sometimes take longer than it should to move back to the right lane after passing, even though it was signaling to do so.
- Temps were in the low 30s and roads were icy in spots. The CT felt very planted.
- Up until a week or so ago, I rarely got "Pay Attention" warnings. However, on this trip I started getting them fairly frequently. I was often wearing sunglasses, and there seemed to be a correlation between the warnings and going in and out of sunshine. For instance, it would be fine for a while when the sun was out. Then, the sun would go behind clouds and I would suddenly get a 'Pay Attention' warning as if wasn't able to see my eyes any more. I think I also saw this happen in the reverse order. It's like it takes a few seconds to adjust exposure or something.
- Charging was a non-issue, as the stops coincided well with bladder and dog-walking breaks.
- Halfway through the trip I started getting warnings about the front camera being dirty and impacting FSD. The wiper didn't seem to be enough to clean it, so we stopped at Fred Meyer and picked up a 60" collapsible snow brush/squeegee. I sprayed the windshield and then used the squeegee and that seemed to do it. Highly recommend getting one! 60" collapsible squeegee
- Having a powered fridge/cooler (IceCo VL35Pro) in the bed makes road trips much better. Leftovers from a restaurant? Half and Half for morning coffee? Half an opened can of dog food? No problem.
- There don't seem to be many CTs in that part of Oregon. Once we left WA, we never saw another until we got back. We did have multiple groups stop by and ask about the truck (mostly when we were parked in tourist area parking lots), and we gave tours to any who were interested. It's still surprising to me that there are folks who don't know a) it's a truck with a 6' bed, and b) it's a Tesla.
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