I used it for the first time to drive 300 miles in my new Tucson. It was amazing and far less tiring to drive. I don't think I'll ever buy a car without this.
How reliable are the braking mechanics when the following distance is set to the closest length? Is it a sudden abrupt stop? I feel like I would be nervous to trust it completely without stepping in to manually brake!
@@dipset422 The breaks are controlled by adaptive cruse control or the radar. It is quite good in CX-5 too. It worked for me in both the cars. It is a slow gradual break. I always set it to the farthest distance though.
@@dipset422 If the person in front of you slams on the brake and you're following closely, it'll stop abruptly (and may engage emergency breaking to avoid a collision). Otherwise, it'll break more or less at the same rate as the car in front. It's (unsurprisingly) smoother than a human would break. It does take some time to get used to trusting the car, for sure. It's not truly self-driving, so you do always have to pay attention to your surroundings. That said, we just took our new 2022 hybrid for two 800-mile drives and it basically drove itself the entire time. It's much less fatiguing to drive long distances and feels so much safer than our old beater. Simple things like reaching over to grab something, eating, taking a jacket off, etc. feel much less harrowing knowing that if your attention lapses for a second, the car will steer or brake for you if it has to. It's especially nice in stop-and-go traffic, because you don't have to do a single thing (except flip the cruise control switch if you're stopped for long enough) -- you don't have to use either pedal or even steer it.
@@dipset422 I only use the closest setting when traffic is going slow, like below 40 mph on a bumper to bumper freeway in Los Angeles. As speed picks up I set the distance greater. I usually keep it on the second or 3rd distance setting. If I’m going 80 on the freeway I like to set the max distance.
All Hyundai Sonata regardless of trim has these technologies: Smart cruise control with stop-b-go and Lane keep assist. My $25K SEL has these and it is so relaxing to drive on the freeway and relieve a lot of stress from traffic.
I have a deposit down and waiting for my 2024 Tucson hybrid Ultimate to arrive in early April. I currently drive a Canadian 2022 Ioniq 5 EV, LR, AWD Ultimate that uses HDA2.0. I do what you are doing in the video, just jiggle the steering wheel a bit. On major highways with minimal traffic, the system allows up to 4 minutes hands free but less when traffic increases. On secondary highways, up to 1 minute of hands free.
He took over the steering wheel. That sends a signal indicating that he wants it “off” so the car did exactly that. There was a construction 🚧 block. The car is not smart enough to NOT hit it because it’s simply following the white lines. If he didn’t take over, ir would have crashed
Only to go straight in or out of a tight slot from outside using the key fob. The 360 camera does make parking manually really easy as it displays the current path based on wheel position of both the rear and the "sweep" of the front end so you can avoid hitting the car next to you when coming out of a slot parking spot. It would be nice if it had true, parallel self-parking but I had it in my 2015 Cherokee and rarely used it. Still.
@@savvasneophytou5664 Agreed. He's driving a Hybrid. My Calligraphy (highest trim w/turbo engine) cost $43,000. There is no real competitor for this car for less than $60,000.
great video I have the 2.0L diesel 8 spd, excellent to see to ACC, LKA etc working, also good to see the how the EV functions ie fuel economy, I think the diesel would definitely rival the hybrid, I'm averaging mid to high 6L/100kms and its not 'run in' yet. Thanks again for video excellent reference of 'how to'
Found a dealership in Los Angeles area that let me order at MSRP with promise to not have any markups. My Santa Fe Limited PHEV should arrive in 2 months or so. Look forward to the Highway Driving Assist and the live video of blind spot. That feature should be copied by every vehicle manufacture. What a safety win there.
@@BitSmythe South Bay Hyundai in Los Angeles (Torrance) I ended up getting the vehicle at MSRP but they pulled a bait and switch when I arrived for the vehicle and threw on extras and tried to get me to pay $5k for the extras. Said they couldn’t remove them and blah blah. I negotiated down for $2500 and then after writing them a few times about the terrible experience they agreed to remove the $2500 and sell at MSRP and they left in the extras. I lucked out I think as clearly almost everyone is charging above MSRP for electrified vehicles especially.
@@JonMoralesLA I just got off the phone with them. “6-8 months” to get a Tucson “Limited.” And of course, $6300 up charge for “LoJack, VIN etching, digital license plate and door edge guards. LoJack $700 retail VIN etching (done at factory?) Digital license plate $700 *plus* annual fee (I do NOT want government tracking nor annual expense) Door edge guards $20 So still asking about $5000 over MSRP. Sheesh…
@@BitSmythe Ouch…I feel your pain. Dealers are going to keep on milking it as long as people keep paying for it and supply is still limited while demand is high.
must be very annoying to have to keep pressing the button after the vehicle comes to a stop in stop and go traffic. Do newer vehicles still have this issue?
Highway driving assist just get speed limit information on only national highways, what u demonstrated didn't use HDA rather it uses Smart Cruise with Stop and go, lane assist. Also the SEL has this feature too
1001 Cars, How did you like the HYbrid Tuscon. Looks great and I am considering it as my next car to replace the 2019 Acura MDX . At 69 yo, and retired doing mainly local drives, the Hybrid makes a lot of sense to me....No Plug In Hybrids either. Just heart a stat that 25% of Californians who had PHEV or EVs, went back to gasoline cars (not sure if that included just regular Hybrids).
PHEV is completely different story comparing to electric car. If you can charge your car at home and your daily drive is no longer than 30-40 mi, PHEV is really good idea. Still you have a car you can use for a long trip. The new Tucson is in my opinion really good car. The interior quality is OK, handling also. I tested HEV version and it is enough powerful and fuel economy is also really good.
I’m someone going from a fully EV Kia Niro over to a PHEV Hyundai Santa Fe. Why? For me it’s the lack of larger SUVs in full EV yet. Sure we have stuff on the way like the Ford F-150 Lightning and I’m sure there’s some mid sized SUV EVs on the way in a year or so. But the Ford MachE and the VW iD4 don’t present a large increase in space over the Kia Niro I’m driving now. The Santa Fe PHEV is exactly the size I need to go up to. PHEV gives me best of both worlds. Long road trips won’t require planning anymore as they did with my Niro EV. Yet much of my daily commute will be in EV mode. Only thing lacking is a button to force EV mode on the Santa Fe. It doesn’t have one.
In my opinion it is similar level. Definitely Hyundai is better with situation like 01:25 but VW makes a little bit better job when lanes are not clearly visible.
@@1001cars OK, przysnąć nie można ;), mam pytanie konkretne : czy w manualu executive bez asystenta autostrady, też auto tak reaguje na zjazd z linii, hamuje przed przeszkodą typu pieszy rower samochód, i czy zahamuje będąc np. na 3 biegu ??
Super film; dzięki :) Jaka to wersja? Platinium HEV + jaki pakiet? Mam za miesiąc do odbioru HEV platinium 4x4 i nigdzie nie widziałem, że jest do wyboru asystent jazdy w korku.. Pozdrawiam
I saw that someone from Hyun said it was intentionally bcs there were hacks for 'holding' the wheel. Moving wheel is more engaging than simply touch so envolve more focus from driver
@@heatplant1234 never do this with a hyundai, as a mechanic, a customer already had a major wheel turn coming from nowhere (without any hack) on a 2021 tucson, these cars were never well made, even if there's a korean hype today, it will never be as well made than a honda or toyota. Not to mention engine fails after 10000 kms.
das macht er jedesmal wenn das tempomat eingeschaltet wird. Man sollte sich aber nicht 100% auf das system verlassen wie das fahren mit hoher geschwindigkeit auf landstraßen .
Probably nobody would like to see 50 minutes of such video. Other thing: what you feel when you are seating behind the steering wheel is comparable with watching video with around 180% speed from the same situation.
I prefer VAG cars autonomous drive because the driver doesn't need to move the wheel when the car alerts him. Touching the wheel is enough in VAG cars.
I definitely don’t have to reengage the self-driving smart cruise control and auto steering in my 2021 Sonata Limited every time it stops lol Love the system but definitely glad I don’t have to do that every time I stop. Occasionally here and there if I’ve been stopped for minutes but every single time like that….WHAAAATTTTT🤣Why would Hyundai offer this feature this way on one car and differently on another when it is the same brand and same ADAS???🤦🏾♂️Oh Hyundai🤣👌🏾
uhh...no thanks,...the lane assist jangles my senses enough. I can deal with a traffic jam. I'm more concerned with engine longevity...HDA is not much needed when a ring seizes,
@@canigetahoooyyyaaaaa7319 Point taken; I know that version.If one can swallow the trade-in disaster offered by the dealers.It is said to be the most consumer-unfriendly transaction out there.
Than get a Toyota, quality and reliability. The only reason I don't buy any toyota is the lack of proper drive assist. It's a very conservative company and they don't wanna release something they don't sure about. And don't be fooled by the fake guarantee offered buy kia/hyundai. Their engine and gearboxes are garbage, they don't give a f. about thermic technologies anyway.
What do you see at 00:15? What do you see at 01:00? What do you see at 02:00? What do you see at 03:00? What do you see at 05:00? What do you see at 07:00? What do you see at 08:00?
@@1001cars HDA must not be supported in your area. If it’s in Highway Drive Assist mode, the speed will change to green, unless you use plus or minus to change it, and there will be a ‘HDA’ icon above the speed. It never went into the HDA mode. Also, it isn’t meant to leave your hands off the wheel. I usually have one resting on the bottom part so I don’t keep getting pestered.
I used it for the first time to drive 300 miles in my new Tucson. It was amazing and far less tiring to drive. I don't think I'll ever buy a car without this.
I let go Mazda CX-5 for this feature and got a new Tucson 22.
How reliable are the braking mechanics when the following distance is set to the closest length? Is it a sudden abrupt stop? I feel like I would be nervous to trust it completely without stepping in to manually brake!
@@dipset422 The breaks are controlled by adaptive cruse control or the radar. It is quite good in CX-5 too. It worked for me in both the cars. It is a slow gradual break. I always set it to the farthest distance though.
@@dipset422 If the person in front of you slams on the brake and you're following closely, it'll stop abruptly (and may engage emergency breaking to avoid a collision). Otherwise, it'll break more or less at the same rate as the car in front. It's (unsurprisingly) smoother than a human would break. It does take some time to get used to trusting the car, for sure. It's not truly self-driving, so you do always have to pay attention to your surroundings. That said, we just took our new 2022 hybrid for two 800-mile drives and it basically drove itself the entire time. It's much less fatiguing to drive long distances and feels so much safer than our old beater. Simple things like reaching over to grab something, eating, taking a jacket off, etc. feel much less harrowing knowing that if your attention lapses for a second, the car will steer or brake for you if it has to. It's especially nice in stop-and-go traffic, because you don't have to do a single thing (except flip the cruise control switch if you're stopped for long enough) -- you don't have to use either pedal or even steer it.
@@dipset422 I only use the closest setting when traffic is going slow, like below 40 mph on a bumper to bumper freeway in Los Angeles. As speed picks up I set the distance greater. I usually keep it on the second or 3rd distance setting. If I’m going 80 on the freeway I like to set the max distance.
Thank You For This Video. I got to see real world MPGs and see Hyundai's driver assist systems in action.
This is 100% going to take the frustration away when I'm stuck in traffic
All Hyundai Sonata regardless of trim has these technologies: Smart cruise control with stop-b-go and Lane keep assist. My $25K SEL has these and it is so relaxing to drive on the freeway and relieve a lot of stress from traffic.
I have a deposit down and waiting for my 2024 Tucson hybrid Ultimate to arrive in early April. I currently drive a Canadian 2022 Ioniq 5 EV, LR, AWD Ultimate that uses HDA2.0. I do what you are doing in the video, just jiggle the steering wheel a bit. On major highways with minimal traffic, the system allows up to 4 minutes hands free but less when traffic increases. On secondary highways, up to 1 minute of hands free.
I just got a 21 Elantra and the smart cruise is trippy. Makes driving in traffic way less stressful
Auto brake ?
Does the green lane assist indicator mean that HDA is active? In the city it was white but changed to green when you hit the highway.
I drove the new tucson today and it’s borderline creepy how good that system works…
Btw: what music is that in the background?
"Government" by Zey Hugdson
Does this control the gas/brake as well?
Yes :)
Why did steering assist turn off at 6:00?
He took over the steering wheel. That sends a signal indicating that he wants it “off” so the car did exactly that. There was a construction 🚧 block. The car is not smart enough to NOT hit it because it’s simply following the white lines. If he didn’t take over, ir would have crashed
I’ve had mine 3 days now and haven’t tried this out yet.a little freaky! How does it do with bends and twists in the roadway?
You got some set of balls my friend.
Love it, except can one change the sound of the turn signal? "Toc - Tick" seems backwards somehow.
Thanks. What about Parking Assistant Features. Does it have any?
Only to go straight in or out of a tight slot from outside using the key fob. The 360 camera does make parking manually really easy as it displays the current path based on wheel position of both the rear and the "sweep" of the front end so you can avoid hitting the car next to you when coming out of a slot parking spot. It would be nice if it had true, parallel self-parking but I had it in my 2015 Cherokee and rarely used it. Still.
@@axion8788 Thanks for explaining. Really strange as this model is quite feature rich...
@@savvasneophytou5664 Agreed. He's driving a Hybrid. My Calligraphy (highest trim w/turbo engine) cost $43,000. There is no real competitor for this car for less than $60,000.
It's an issue that you must press the accelerator every time, no?
great video I have the 2.0L diesel 8 spd, excellent to see to ACC, LKA etc working, also good to see the how the EV functions ie fuel economy, I think the diesel would definitely rival the hybrid, I'm averaging mid to high 6L/100kms and its not 'run in' yet. Thanks again for video excellent reference of 'how to'
Found a dealership in Los Angeles area that let me order at MSRP with promise to not have any markups. My Santa Fe Limited PHEV should arrive in 2 months or so.
Look forward to the Highway Driving Assist and the live video of blind spot. That feature should be copied by every vehicle manufacture. What a safety win there.
Hi, Jon. What dealer? I’m getting quotes of $7500 _over_ MSRP for the Tucson “Limited.” Damn rapists…
@@BitSmythe South Bay Hyundai in Los Angeles (Torrance)
I ended up getting the vehicle at MSRP but they pulled a bait and switch when I arrived for the vehicle and threw on extras and tried to get me to pay $5k for the extras. Said they couldn’t remove them and blah blah. I negotiated down for $2500 and then after writing them a few times about the terrible experience they agreed to remove the $2500 and sell at MSRP and they left in the extras.
I lucked out I think as clearly almost everyone is charging above MSRP for electrified vehicles especially.
@@JonMoralesLA Good job! Now, I just wish they had more than 5 shades of grey. Either way, amazing vehicle!
@@JonMoralesLA I just got off the phone with them. “6-8 months” to get a Tucson “Limited.” And of course, $6300 up charge for “LoJack, VIN etching, digital license plate and door edge guards.
LoJack $700 retail
VIN etching (done at factory?)
Digital license plate $700 *plus* annual fee (I do NOT want government tracking nor annual expense)
Door edge guards $20
So still asking about $5000 over MSRP. Sheesh…
@@BitSmythe Ouch…I feel your pain. Dealers are going to keep on milking it as long as people keep paying for it and supply is still limited while demand is high.
So do you have to keep moving the wheel on the highway?
same question
if the car is equipped with smart cruise control 2(new version), it is slower and faster and adjusting spped following curve degree
must be very annoying to have to keep pressing the button after the vehicle comes to a stop in stop and go traffic. Do newer vehicles still have this issue?
It is not a problem. This is made like that because of the law regulations.
Highway driving assist just get speed limit information on only national highways, what u demonstrated didn't use HDA rather it uses Smart Cruise with Stop and go, lane assist. Also the SEL has this feature too
How to set it up for local drive?
I think SEL you are referring to is Hybrid SEL Convenience.
This is a brilliant video, thank you!
Yeah I just found this out by accident! Dealership or salesman mentioned this.
Does it lower the car speed in the curves automatically?
Yes, if the car is equipped with smart cruise control 2(new version), it is slower and faster and adjusting spped following curve degree
I have blue version. Can I upgrade it in dealer ?
Just about to buy a 2022 Tucson SEL. Thanks!
I don't think an SEL has this. Please check with your dealership
can it stop at the red lights when you're the first car in the line?
No, it cannot.
Thank you. As far as I know no any car can do it so far. :( @@1001cars
Zawsze trzeba naciskać przycisk/gaz żeby auto ruszyło?
Przez pierwsze kilka sekund od zatrzymania nie trzeba
Hello, thanks for sharing. Is the acceleration and braking smooth when driving in smart cruise mode?
Yes, it works really good.
1001 Cars, How did you like the HYbrid Tuscon. Looks great and I am considering it as my next car to replace the 2019 Acura MDX . At 69 yo, and retired doing mainly local drives, the Hybrid makes a lot of sense to me....No Plug In Hybrids either. Just heart a stat that 25% of Californians who had PHEV or EVs, went back to gasoline cars (not sure if that included just regular Hybrids).
PHEV is completely different story comparing to electric car. If you can charge your car at home and your daily drive is no longer than 30-40 mi, PHEV is really good idea. Still you have a car you can use for a long trip. The new Tucson is in my opinion really good car. The interior quality is OK, handling also. I tested HEV version and it is enough powerful and fuel economy is also really good.
I’m someone going from a fully EV Kia Niro over to a PHEV Hyundai Santa Fe. Why? For me it’s the lack of larger SUVs in full EV yet. Sure we have stuff on the way like the Ford F-150 Lightning and I’m sure there’s some mid sized SUV EVs on the way in a year or so.
But the Ford MachE and the VW iD4 don’t present a large increase in space over the Kia Niro I’m driving now.
The Santa Fe PHEV is exactly the size I need to go up to. PHEV gives me best of both worlds. Long road trips won’t require planning anymore as they did with my Niro EV. Yet much of my daily commute will be in EV mode.
Only thing lacking is a button to force EV mode on the Santa Fe. It doesn’t have one.
So how is the HEV charging itself ? By driving more to charge it ?
May as well to just getting the plugging version ?
Charges with braking and driving with the gas engine. Electric only used for speeds under 40mpg. Advantages and drawbacks to both hybrid systems.
The system will not automatically brake for red lights, correct?
Not it will not, this is not allowed in entire Europe.
@@1001cars, thank you for the response.
Hello, which type of motorisation is used in the video? Petrol or diesel, mild or full hybrid ?
Thank you
Hybrid
Great video I wish my 19 sante fe ultimate had these newer features. I'm waiting for a Phev version of the palisade then I will get it asap!
Does the Genisis GV80 have the same features?
Genesis brand has better one
How does the assit system feel compared to WV, which would you prefer?
In my opinion it is similar level. Definitely Hyundai is better with situation like 01:25 but VW makes a little bit better job when lanes are not clearly visible.
5:37 co się stało?
Zgubił linie na skrzyżowaniu
@@1001cars OK, przysnąć nie można ;), mam pytanie konkretne : czy w manualu executive bez asystenta autostrady, też auto tak reaguje na zjazd z linii, hamuje przed przeszkodą typu pieszy rower samochód, i czy zahamuje będąc np. na 3 biegu ??
@@aldurer8979 To o czym móisz, to wyposażenie standardowe (jeśli chodzi o systemy bezpieczeństwa), samochód musi reagować w takich sytuacjach
@@1001cars OK w sierpniu mam odebrać, więc sprawdzę, dzięki.
Sam zmienia pasy po załączeniu kierunkowskazów?
Nie zmienia.
Super film; dzięki :) Jaka to wersja? Platinium HEV + jaki pakiet? Mam za miesiąc do odbioru HEV platinium 4x4 i nigdzie nie widziałem, że jest do wyboru asystent jazdy w korku.. Pozdrawiam
HEV Platinum :) Asystent jazdy w korku jest właściwie częścią "highway assist"
@@1001cars Dziękuję, no to się wyjaśniło, w takim razie muszę się obejść smakiem, bo highway assist jest w pakiecie safety tylko...
This is perfect for eating while driving hahaha
Peugoet travel assit?
peugeots lane assist is crap compared to Tucson. Peugeot keeps doing ping pongs on the lane. both the 2008 and 3008
not true, since 2021
@@hotdog160 i test drove the latest facelift 3008 gt and the 2008 gt and they are crap.
I'm surprised how I haven't seen anyone freaking out about using cruise control in the winter?
If you don't hold at all steering what happens ?
Unfortunately, you have to really turn the wheel in order to deactivate the warning. It doesn't recognize your hand
I saw that someone from Hyun said it was intentionally bcs there were hacks for 'holding' the wheel. Moving wheel is more engaging than simply touch so envolve more focus from driver
A nerf football wedged between the wheel and dashboard will keep the warning from coming on as long as it needs to turn a little bit occasionally.
@@heatplant1234 never do this with a hyundai, as a mechanic, a customer already had a major wheel turn coming from nowhere (without any hack) on a 2021 tucson, these cars were never well made, even if there's a korean hype today, it will never be as well made than a honda or toyota. Not to mention engine fails after 10000 kms.
das macht er jedesmal wenn das tempomat eingeschaltet wird. Man sollte sich aber nicht 100% auf das system verlassen wie das fahren mit hoher geschwindigkeit auf landstraßen .
Why would you speed up the video. I wanted to see how naturally drives
Probably nobody would like to see 50 minutes of such video. Other thing: what you feel when you are seating behind the steering wheel is comparable with watching video with around 180% speed from the same situation.
I prefer VAG cars autonomous drive because the driver doesn't need to move the wheel when the car alerts him. Touching the wheel is enough in VAG cars.
But still you have to controle the wheel in between and that is irritating.
I definitely don’t have to reengage the self-driving smart cruise control and auto steering in my 2021 Sonata Limited every time it stops lol Love the system but definitely glad I don’t have to do that every time I stop. Occasionally here and there if I’ve been stopped for minutes but every single time like that….WHAAAATTTTT🤣Why would Hyundai offer this feature this way on one car and differently on another when it is the same brand and same ADAS???🤦🏾♂️Oh Hyundai🤣👌🏾
MY MOM JUST GOT THAT CAR
So, basically this car is like a Tesla.
He is a reckless driver one slip up and your done for life
uhh...no thanks,...the lane assist jangles my senses enough. I can deal with a traffic jam. I'm more concerned with engine longevity...HDA is not much needed when a ring seizes,
Why keep a car for long anyways? Drive till the warranty is about to be over and trade it in for a new one.
@@canigetahoooyyyaaaaa7319 Point taken; I know that version.If one can swallow the trade-in disaster offered by the dealers.It is said to be the most consumer-unfriendly transaction out there.
Than get a Toyota, quality and reliability. The only reason I don't buy any toyota is the lack of proper drive assist. It's a very conservative company and they don't wanna release something they don't sure about.
And don't be fooled by the fake guarantee offered buy kia/hyundai. Their engine and gearboxes are garbage, they don't give a f. about thermic technologies anyway.
Oh great now hyundais are becoming teslas
My dad has this car btw and its awesome :D
Nice video, but *don’t need the porn music!*
IT's not a Tucson it's a Santa Fe....
What do you see at 00:15?
What do you see at 01:00?
What do you see at 02:00?
What do you see at 03:00?
What do you see at 05:00?
What do you see at 07:00?
What do you see at 08:00?
What the heck is this annoying creepy background music?
When did it switch to HDA ???
Can you explain what exactly you need to know?
@@1001cars I did, when did it switch to HDA?
@@w159 on the highway, you could see on the movie.
@@1001cars HDA must not be supported in your area. If it’s in Highway Drive Assist mode, the speed will change to green, unless you use plus or minus to change it, and there will be a ‘HDA’ icon above the speed.
It never went into the HDA mode.
Also, it isn’t meant to leave your hands off the wheel. I usually have one resting on the bottom part so I don’t keep getting pestered.