Greetings all, I know there are a couple threads on this but I went to test drive a Model 3 today (I have never been in an EV before) and while the acceleration was unlike anything I've ever experienced (completely amazing) the regen braking was so discombobulating to me and nearly immediately gave me motion sickness. I tried my best to practice gently letting off the gas but it still was so foreign to me as a person that has only ever driven automatics. I am prone to motion sickness and I got it bad during this 30 minute test drive.
So I got home and researched it and many people said that switching Regen Braking from "Standard" to "Low" can really help. So I replied to my test drive thank you email by stating that I would like to test drive it again with it in Regen Low mode and the rep told me it is no longer an option on Tesla cars.
So, I'm curious if any of you are very prone to motion sickness and if you eventually adapted to it? I'm also worried that many posts I saw about the autopilot has a tendency to accelerate harder than a person would manually and brake harder than a person manually would (when you're following a car on the freeway for example) which, to me, means it would induce motion sickness in people like me that are prone to it.
Thoughts?
So I got home and researched it and many people said that switching Regen Braking from "Standard" to "Low" can really help. So I replied to my test drive thank you email by stating that I would like to test drive it again with it in Regen Low mode and the rep told me it is no longer an option on Tesla cars.
So, I'm curious if any of you are very prone to motion sickness and if you eventually adapted to it? I'm also worried that many posts I saw about the autopilot has a tendency to accelerate harder than a person would manually and brake harder than a person manually would (when you're following a car on the freeway for example) which, to me, means it would induce motion sickness in people like me that are prone to it.
Thoughts?