I've another one: short press the speak button uses the car's voice commands system, when you long press when android auto is Running you're using Google's commands/voice system
If you long press the button that activates the adaptive cruise control, it will activate a speed limit. I use that in the city. I set it to 53 kph (the speed limit is 50 kph in Denmark, the car is displaying 3 kph more than GPS speed). Now I can drive without looking at my speed as the car will not exceed the speed limit. If I floor it, there’s an override function and the car will ding at me until I get below the limit. You can turn it off temporarily and adjust it like the adaptive cruise.
Ah, yes. That's one that I forgot about. It's not one that I've ever really used. Although I do sometimes use the cruise control on stretches that need me to stay below the limit.
@@EVCarShare I don’t like the adaptive part of the cruise control because I find it’s sometimes too aggressive in breaking and not predictable. It doesn’t drive like I would. I like controlling the speed and adjusting to traffic etc. I do like the car to limit me to the speed limit to prevent any tickets so I don’t have to watch it so closely.
@@tomm5936 yes, in traffic, especially stop/start traffic it does tend to slow down much later than I would too. But oddly enough on the motorway at 70 mph it seems to slow sooner than I would so I tend to use distance 1 on motorways and distance 3 or 4 in town.
How old is your car? If it is built before 2024 then you don't get the speed limit warning in the first place, so every car that is "older" doesn't need and doesn't get the function, only 2024 models and later do that. And if your car is a 2024 then you need the update and then it should work automatically without adjusting any settings.
Ah, OK. That makes sense. My car is 2022. Sometimes seeing things written in the software update release notes is misleading because as you say, it doesn't necessarily apply to all cars that get the update.
@@EVCarShare It should say somewhere (e.g. in the Hyundai updater it doesn't - I drive a 2023 Tucson) and it's not very obvious to people who don't know that.
I've another one: short press the speak button uses the car's voice commands system, when you long press when android auto is Running you're using Google's commands/voice system
Yes, well spotted. I did remember that one but only after I'd done the recording, so I added it in the description.
If you long press the button that activates the adaptive cruise control, it will activate a speed limit. I use that in the city. I set it to 53 kph (the speed limit is 50 kph in Denmark, the car is displaying 3 kph more than GPS speed). Now I can drive without looking at my speed as the car will not exceed the speed limit. If I floor it, there’s an override function and the car will ding at me until I get below the limit. You can turn it off temporarily and adjust it like the adaptive cruise.
Ah, yes. That's one that I forgot about. It's not one that I've ever really used. Although I do sometimes use the cruise control on stretches that need me to stay below the limit.
@@EVCarShare I don’t like the adaptive part of the cruise control because I find it’s sometimes too aggressive in breaking and not predictable. It doesn’t drive like I would. I like controlling the speed and adjusting to traffic etc. I do like the car to limit me to the speed limit to prevent any tickets so I don’t have to watch it so closely.
@@tomm5936 yes, in traffic, especially stop/start traffic it does tend to slow down much later than I would too. But oddly enough on the motorway at 70 mph it seems to slow sooner than I would so I tend to use distance 1 on motorways and distance 3 or 4 in town.
How old is your car? If it is built before 2024 then you don't get the speed limit warning in the first place, so every car that is "older" doesn't need and doesn't get the function, only 2024 models and later do that. And if your car is a 2024 then you need the update and then it should work automatically without adjusting any settings.
Ah thanks for that explanation. I couldn’t figure that out either, my car is 2022.
Ah, OK. That makes sense. My car is 2022. Sometimes seeing things written in the software update release notes is misleading because as you say, it doesn't necessarily apply to all cars that get the update.
@@EVCarShare It should say somewhere (e.g. in the Hyundai updater it doesn't - I drive a 2023 Tucson) and it's not very obvious to people who don't know that.
I kindly suggest you get to the point quicker in your videos. Sound is good. Video is a bit shaky so a gimbal could help. Cheers!
Thanks for the tip