- Joined
- Oct 11, 2022
- Threads
- 0
- Messages
- 162
- Reaction score
- 310
- Location
- Cleveland, OH
- Vehicle(s)
- 2023 Ford Maverick Lariat, 2024 Ford Mustang Mach E Premium
- Engine
- 2.0L EcoBoost
I had Co-Pilot added to my 2022 Hybrid Mav. On a scale of 1-5, 5 being outstanding I'd give it a 3.5. For several years had a Honda CRV previous to the Mav and their equivalent ran very well, especially lane assistance so my comparisons are to that. I also have the Mav CoPilot settings to strictest lane assistance. The lane assistance on the CoPilot is weak - sometimes I had it on and on an open road and no one around tested it. It let me drift over the lines frequently which is disappointing (Honda's would strictly keep you in). Sometimes I can drift halfway over the line and it will either resist lightly or jerk you back in the lane. Pretty poor performance IMHO.
The front end collision assistance on the other hand is hyper-sensitive. I have been just nicely cruising along in another lane, no car drifting in front of me, everyone in their lane and it suddenly go off and scaring the heck out of us. Then have had a couple of moments where I came close to backending someone due to them slamming their brakes or cutting in front and stopping and it never even came on.
The best function is the backup warning light coming on when in reverse. It has worked very well.
So co-Pilot is somewhat helpful overall - needs some work though to actually increase safety as it is supposed to do.
Walt
Thank you for putting together this review. I have never owned a vehicle with any of these safety features, so I appreciate hearing the experiences others have with them on the Maverick.
My MY2024 Maverick will be getting built in just over 2 weeks from now. It's a Lariat EB, so it will have CP360 and CP360Assist as the Lariats are loaded by default for MY2024.
Immediately upon picking up the truck we will have several long trips to take in the USA and Mexico; definitely will be setting up and utilizing all of these features. I'll post my observations here as well.
I didn't realize there was such a discrepancy for what is available in the XLT and Lariat in regards to Co-Pilot features.I screen-cap'd this in the past when I was shopping for my Mav, not sure where I got it. From Ford's site, maybe?
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All models have the driver assist technology at the bottom.
I bought my XL used and the prior owner purchased CP360. I would not have chosen it as an option. Even though I've always looked over my shoulder, I have grown to like the blind spot monitoring just because it seems like the Mav has a larger C-pillar blind spot than most other vehicles I've owned which just isn't visible over the shoulder. I really dislike the vibrating steering wheel for the lane keeping alert and turned that off, but I've started to like the part of it which silently nudges the wheel (not sure what that's called) when that's detected. I'm a very analog person though and I don't know if I'll ever get used to the feeling.
I could not agree more. It often seems like a lot of people are more concerned with the value of their vehicle to the next owner, and not the value to them, the current owner.
I will say that after several thousand miles on the highways in my Lariat with all the CP360 features (adaptive cruise, blind spot, lane keeping, lane centering); I am 100% loving that I opted for every "intelligent" feature that was available for it. Several all-day road trips and I felt noticeably less fatigued after when the car does a big chunk of the work for me. That is ABSOLUTELY not to say there is still the need to be attentive and make "micro" corrections on things; but setting the adaptive cruise control to the farthest follow-distance and turning lane centering on affords me the chance to actively enjoy the drive significantly more than before.
In almost 10,000 miles of road trips and highway cruising, I believe there has been two or three times so far where the Maverick saw something that wasn't there or miscalculated something and pre-emptively braked for no reason. Considering that probably works out to something like a 99.5% accuracy rate I think it is a massively successful feature that more people should have at their disposal. The biggest nuisance about it so far for me is when someone changes lanes in front of me in the slow lane and, because I have the distance set to max, it immediately decelerates several miles per hour to gain the follow distance back. Outside of that nuisance and the frequent reminders to "keep hands on steering wheel" when I do have my hands on the wheel, it has been an amazing feature that I can't praise highly enough and I wouldn't want any future vehicle of mine to not have it.
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