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Well as mentioned previously, on the Model Y, 2024.8.7 (downloaded and installed on the 4th April in NZ) enabled the matrix headlights a week ago.That's a great feature if it works as advertised, does my car have the right hardware?.
So far FSD, wipers, auto main beam, the list goes on... do not.
Maybe I groused too much and went to the back of the queue, my update yesterday was only 2024.8.7!
if you can play lightshow and it projects TESLA on wall, you have matrix headlight....That's a great feature if it works as advertised, does my car have the right hardware?.
So far FSD, wipers, auto main beam, the list goes on... do not.
Maybe I groused too much and went to the back of the queue, my update yesterday was only 2024.8.7!
I don't know when Tesla started installing Matrix Headlights as standard. It looks like it was quite hit and miss for a while - depending on which plant the vehicle came from - particularly in the States.Negative, maybe my car is too old.
This will happen more and more as the fleet ages, the hardware will become the limitation.
good on Tesla.... agree with youHardly the end of the world if you dont have them I reckon, but it's nice that they fitted the hardware, didn't advertise it and have (finally) switched the functionality on - for free.
I like that Tesla does deliver things (with OTA updates) that effectively improve the car that you originally bought. Not sure who else does that.
I had in my audi this all the time before I had my first Tesla in 2021... It was always based on camera in front (right behind rear view mirror).Happened to be out in the car on a mix of roads and streets last night and it was the first time I had seen the Matrix headlights doing their adaptive business.
Have to say it was pretty impressive.
You dont see anything on well lit roadways, but as soon as you get somewhere with less traffic and street lighting you could see the areas of lighting in front of you constantly changing. It would noticeably dim areas where there was reflection (car rear reflectors) and it seemed immediate to drop the light in the area of an oncoming car. No-one flashed lights at me - so it must be all good.
I wonder how they are implementing it. Are they using the Tesla vision to work it all out or is it something built into the headlight array?
Presumably if other car makers have it it must be in the headlights.