S05_G_ASE_LHD_EV_English_15AUGUST

Vehicle Driving

Cruise Control

Adaptive Cruise Control (ACC)

The driving assistance system mainly relies on radar and cameras to perceive the vehicle's surrounding environment in real time. In order to protect the radio astronomy services operating in the same frequency band, vehicles equipped with radars shall not enter the interference protection distance of local relevant radio astronomy observatories: Adaptive Cruise Control (ACC) detects vehicles in front through the front millimeter - wave radar installed behind the front bumper and the front camera at interior rearview mirror, allowing the vehicle to travel at the set speed. When a moving vehicle with a speed lower than the set speed appears in front, it automatically maintains the distance from the vehicle in front and stops/starts following the vehicle in front.

Please read carefully and be aware of all information of this section before use ACC.

WARNING

Due to the complexity of driving environments such as real - time traffic, roads, and weather, the cruise system cannot ensure correct detection under all conditions. Please turn off ACC function and drive carefully in harsh environment. ACC can’t drive on behalf of the driver. You must keep control of the vehicle, drive carefully, abide by the speed limit and other traffic rules, and take full responsibility for driving the vehicle.

WARNING

ACC only works for vehicles traveling in the same direction in front of the lane. It does not work for oncoming/crossing/stationary/slow - moving vehicles, pedestrians, animals and other objects on the road (such as cones, plastic barriers, guardrails, stones, etc.). ACC is a driver assistance system that provides gentle acceleration and braking. It cannot fully prevent collisions and is best used on highways or well - maintained roads. Do not use ACC under the following road and environmental conditions (not limited to): 1. Environments that strongly reflect radar signals (such as multi - storey car parks, tunnels, substations, steel frame bridges, etc.); Scenes with rapid changes in light (such as backlight, glare, entering or exiting a tunnel, etc.); Scenes with poor lighting conditions (such as night, cloudy days, etc.). 2. Urban roads, mountain roads, on - and off - ramps, slippery roads, steep slopes, bumpy roads or roads with sharp bends. 3. Scenes with bad weather and poor visibility (such as rain/snow/fog/dust/insufficient lighting/reflection/backlight/glare/entering and exiting tunnels/boulevards, etc.).

CAUTION

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