AUTO REVIEW: Cadillac’s ‘Super Cruise’ Hands-Free Driving System

(Los Angeles Times/TNS) —
A steering wheel light bar and cluster icons indicates the status of Super Cruise and will prompt the driver to return their attention to the road ahead if the system detects driver attention has turned away from the road too long. (Wes Allison/Cadillac/TNS)

Cadillac is in the middle of a massive marketing campaign to introduce its new Super Cruise. The semi-autonomous driving system, available only on the CT6 luxury sedan, is being billed as offering the “first true hands-free driving on the freeway.”

The car company has sent CT6 sedans literally across the country, holding events in multiple U.S. cities, offering auto journalists short Super Cruise seminars followed by a turn behind the wheel.

The system is highly sophisticated. Using a combination of Lidar, high-resolution GPS and a Driver Attention System that monitors the driver, Super Cruise will allow the car — on certain roads, under certain conditions — to travel great distances without any steering wheel input by its operator.

The system is said by Cadillac press materials to offer “comfort and convenience,” and to inspire “trust, confidence and peace of mind.”

“This takes adaptive cruise control to the next level,” Cadillac marketing chief Kurt Ghering told a small group of auto writers gathered near Los Angeles this month. “It’s like riding a monorail.”

Working in tandem with the CT6’s adaptive cruise control system, the Lidar and GPS watch the road and anticipate turns, obstacles or other changes in the driving surface. Sensors posted on the steering wheel watch the driver to make sure his or her eyes are facing forward and trained on the road ahead.

Hands-free driving technology for the highway is a button push away with Super Cruise on the 2018 Cadillac CT6 sedan. (Wes Allison/Cadillac/TNS)

The driver can turn away for extended periods — up to four or five seconds, in most situations — to adjust the radio, pull something from the back seat or rifle the glove compartment — while the car maintains speed and direction.

If the driver should turn away for longer than that, nod off or fail to respond to certain warning signals, the Super Cruise system will take action.

First, if a driver’s attention wanders from the road for too long, the system will produce a flashing light, audible chime or haptic sensation in the driver’s seat.

Then, if the driver waits too long to acknowledge the warning signals, the system will relinquish control of the car and decline to redeploy for the duration of the drive — exactly what happened to me the first time I drove a Tesla Model X equipped with Autopilot.

Finally, if the driver doesn’t respond at all — because he or she is sleeping, say, or having a medical emergency — the system will slow the car down gradually, bring it to a stop, put on the emergency flashers and call 911.

The restrictions are very specific. Super Cruise works only on “limited access” highways — those that have on-ramps and off-ramps, and don’t have any cross traffic. The system will engage only when the car is in the dead center of the lane, and the adaptive cruise control is engaged, and only above a certain speed.

The system relinquishes steering duties when the driver needs to make a lane change, merge from one freeway to another or exit a freeway.

Under the right conditions, it works pretty well. During a mid-afternoon drive, on three different freeways, Super Cruise took the wheel and the adaptive cruise control worked all the pedals as traffic slowed, stopped, stalled and started up again.

The driver attention system uses a small camera located on the top of the steering column and works with infrared lights to determine where the driver is looking whenever Super Cruise is in operation. (Wes Allison/Cadillac/TNS)

“You’re still the supervisor, but you could drive from Santa Monica to Irvine without once having to touch the wheel,” Ghering said.

Unlike Tesla’s Autopilot driver assist program, Super Cruise does not integrate with the onboard navigation system, and can be initiated only when driving conditions are met and the driver, prompted by an icon on the dashboard, pushes a button on the steering wheel.

The Super Cruise system will be standard on the 2018 CT6 Platinum and is offered as a $5,000 upgrade on the CT6 Premium Luxury, as part of a suite of driver assist and safety features. It is not available on lower trim-level CT6s.

Ghering said it was likely the system would be offered on other GM vehicles in the future in the U.S. It will start appearing on CT6 sedans sold in China by 2019.

Cadillac faces a marketing challenge. Super Cruise, as a self-driving system that is likelier to appeal to younger drivers comfortable with cutting-edge technology, must be made appealing to the older consumers who typically patronize the Cadillac nameplate.

The GM division said that its September sales were up 16 percent globally over the same month in 2016, representing a 16-month run of consecutive growth. Year to date, the company has sold 256,613 vehicles.

But those improvements were largely in China, where sales were up 37 percent. Sales in the U.S. rose just 1.1 percent during the same period.

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