What is Adaptive Cruise Control?
Adaptive Cruise Control allows you to set a cruising speed and monitors traffic ahead, maintaining a safe distance between vehicles.
How does Adaptive Cruise Control work?
Adaptive cruise control uses a radar sensor to adjust your vehicle speed to maintain a set gap between you and the vehicle in front of you in the same lane.
Switching Adaptive Cruise Control On and Off
The cruise controls are on the steering wheel.
Switching Adaptive Cruise Control On
Press the button to activate the system. When the system activates, the set speed is equal to the current vehicle speed. If the speed is too low, or other conditions are not correct for adaptive cruise control activation, the system enters standby mode.
Note: The minimum set speed is 15 mph or 20 km/h.
The indicator, current gap setting and set speed appear in the instrument cluster display.
Switching Adaptive Cruise Control Off
Press the button when the system is in standby mode or switch the ignition off.
Note: When you switch the system off, the set speed clears.
Automatic Cancellation or Deactivation
The system may cancel if:
- The tires lose traction.
- You apply the parking brake.
- Your vehicle speed falls significantly below 15 mph or 20 km/h.
The system may turn off or prevent activating when requested if:
- The vehicle has a blocked sensor.
- The brake temperature is too high.
- There is a failure in the system or a related system.
For specific information on your vehicle, refer to your Owner's manual.