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You will see SOME cars approaching, but it's spotty and not very useful or reliable. FSD wont add more robust approaching cars until the new beta stack goes mainstream, and no-one has a clue on that timeline.In my 2021 M3/LR, the left side of the screen shows the rendering of cars in adjacent lanes moving in the same direction as me. However, oncoming cars in the adjacent lane are not shown, even with my new FSD subscription. Is this normal?
You’ll get used to not looking at it. Because it’s completely useless.Is there a way to disable, hid or cover that real-time traffic view? I have found it very distracting on the test drives that I have taken. My preference is to watch for traffic in the real world, not on a computer screen.
I have noted in one review that it does not show up in track mode, displaying instead battery monitoring. However, driving around in track mode all of the time is probably not practical.
I think that's a priority because they're obstacles on the road and it's simply displaying what the camera sees. Stands out pretty, well I can see how it may benefit some drivers to see on the screen.It WILL see traffic cones and trash cans galore though! A strange priority by Tesla engineers I think….
I beg to differ, I find myself using it to see cars in my blind spots. I hate using the cameras for that.You’ll get used to not looking at it. Because it’s completely useless.
Two cars coming from opposite directions at say 50 mph, are closing in at 150 feet per second. So say give the computer 1 sec to process and recognize, half a sec to take whatever corrective maneuver it would glean from knowing it's an obstacle, it would have to start trying to comprehend the car from the few tiny pixels starting at 225 feet away (3/4 of a football field). Now multiply this by dozens new cars per second in oncoming lanes vs the 5-10 relatively stationary cars moving with you in the same directions....It WILL see traffic cones and trash cans galore though! A strange priority by Tesla engineers I think….
After a week or so it wont distract you .. like anything, as your brain gets used to it, it will not keep going "ooh .. shiny!"Is there a way to disable, hid or cover that real-time traffic view? I have found it very distracting on the test drives that I have taken. My preference is to watch for traffic in the real world, not on a computer screen.
I have noted in one review that it does not show up in track mode, displaying instead battery monitoring. However, driving around in track mode all of the time is probably not practical.
Perhaps you should go watch some of the FSD beta videos...Two cars coming from opposite directions at say 50 mph, are closing in at 150 feet per second. So say give the computer 1 sec to process and recognize, half a sec to take whatever corrective maneuver it would glean from knowing it's an obstacle, it would have to start trying to comprehend the car from the few tiny pixels starting at 225 feet away (3/4 of a football field). Now multiply this by dozens new cars per second in oncoming lanes vs the 5-10 relatively stationary cars moving with you in the same directions....
Aside from a more general recognition that the oncoming blips are an opposing lane of traffic and making sure to not move into it, why prioritize recognizing and visualizing each and every car in opposing traffic, when they are going to disappear almost immediately, and even before that run out of time to take any useful corrective action? Stationary vehicles, like emergency vehicles and broken down cars in the right lane, are already hard enough with the values being just half of the figures above...