GM tops Tesla in ranking of automated driving systems

FAN Editor

As more automakers develop automated driving systems that allow drivers to take their hands off the wheel for short periods of time, a new report says General Motors has developed the best system.

Consumer Reports tested four of the most popular systems and says Cadillac’s Super Cruise does the best job of ensuring the vehicle is driven safely while making sure the driver pays attention when they take their hands off the steering wheel.

“Super Cruise has a camera that looks at the driver’s eyes and warns them if they look away for too long or fall asleep and that’s a game changer,” said Jake Fisher, director of Auto Testing at Consumer Reports.

When Cadillac put reporters and analysts behind the wheel of CT6 with Super Cruise, Michelle Krebs, analyst for AutoTrader said, “This is definitely a shot across the bow of Tesla, which already has Autopilot.”

Consumer Reports ranks Tesla’s Autopilot as the second most effective automated driving system, criticizing it for not doing enough to keep the driver engaged when the vehicle is in Autopilot mode.

“Autopilot is a strong system, but it doesn’t have enough safeguards,” said Fisher.

Consumer Reports rated Nissan’s ProPILOT Assist as the third best system and Volvo’s Pilot Assist as the least effective of the four automated driving systems it tested. Nissan says ProPILOT Assist is a “hands-on” driver assist system rather than a “self-driving” feature. Volvo wasn’t immediately available to comment.

The systems were evaluated at Consumer Reports’ test track and on public and highways. The reviews are based on five criteria: capability and performance, ease of use, if the systems made it clear when it was safe to use, whether they kept the driver engaged and how they alerted or handled an unresponsive driver.

Consumer Reports is not warning people to avoid using any of the automated driving systems it tested, but it wants drivers to better understand the limits of the technology.

Ever since Tesla unveiled autopilot in 2015, it’s been controversial technology. When it first came out in “beta” mode, Tesla CEO Elon Musk said, “It is important to exercise great caution at this early stage.”

Not everyone got the message. Within months of rolling out, Tesla owners posted videos on YouTube showing themselves driving hands free and not always paying attention.

In 2016, a Tesla driver was killed when his Model S in Autopilot mode crashed into a semi-truck in Williston, Florida. The National Transportation Safety Board concluded limitations in Tesla’s Autopilot system played a major role in the fatal crash. NTSB Chairman Robert Sumwalt bluntly summarized the case saying, “System safeguards were lacking.”

Two years later, as more vehicles and more automakers develop automated driving systems, Consumer Reports is worried drivers will become too complacent and not be ready to grab the steering wheel if their car or truck steers itself into trouble.

“The big concern is putting too much trust in these systems,” said Fisher. “Drivers are not always paying attention when these systems are in use.”

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