ShaggySS
Well-Known Member
- First Name
- Scott
- Joined
- Jul 21, 2022
- Threads
- 7
- Messages
- 484
- Reaction score
- 534
- Location
- Roseville, CA
- Vehicles
- 2022 Mach-E Premium RWD
- Occupation
- IT Nerd
- Thread starter
- #1
I am a Mach-E owner with over 34K miles and new Model Y part owner (wife's car). We took a trip to Southern California so I was able to test out AutoPilot and wanted to compare it to BlueCruise. I always use BlueCurise on the freeway and am pretty happy with the standard 1.0 system at its prior price point. Both systems have pros and cons. While I am more familiar with Blue Cruise having used it so much I was impressed with how autopilot functioned in several areas but also lacking in some basics.
Cost:
Ford Blue Cruise 1.0 - $800 per year
Tesla AutoPilot - Included in the price of the car
Hands Free:
BlueCruise wins easily by allowing the driver to remove their hands from the steering wheel while enabled. AutoPilot requires you to keep your hands on the steering wheel and apply limited force to register your hands. Too much force and it will disengage which I found very frustrating. Blue Cruise allows the driver to manually steer the car which I do if the car next to me is on the line. If you attempt this with autopilot it disengages the system which also disengages adaptive cruise control so the regen on the brakes slows you down quickly. Most of my trip was straight so I didn't get a lot of testing with sharper turns but AutoPllot did fine maintaining the lane on turns I know BlueCruise would disengage for.
Traffic:
AutoPilot does a great job looking further ahead and slowing down gently if traffic is slowing. BlueCruise doesn't seem to see as far ahead and therefore slams on the brakes very late. My daily commute takes me past a place where traffic ALWAYS is going 70MPH to a stop and I disable the system before coming up on that and once I am in traffic I will turn it back on. I found myself doing this with AutoPilot a few times because I am so used to not trusting the car to do it smoothly but when I did autopilot did a great job. AutoPilot is slow to return back to the set speed. If someone in front of you moves out of the way AutoPilot will very very slowly return to speed whereas bluecruise will GO! This works well in BlueCruise most of the time except in heavy stop and go traffic. AutoPilot will more naturally speed up and slow down whereas BlueCurise is a bit jerky. My wife pointed out that I can push the go pedal to make autopilot speed up more quickly which was necessary at times to not piss off the people behind me.
Max Speed:
BlueCruise 81 MPH
AutoPilot 85 MPH
Overall 81MPH is plenty, but on I5 the traffic moves at a much faster pace so the 85 was a nice bonus. I did get put on autopilot time-out when I had it enabled and used the go pedal to exceed 85MPH, got this error "Autosteer unavailable for the rest of this drive Auto Steer speed limit exceeded" was the error and rebooting, and canceling the route both wouldn't let me out of timeout. My wife was very assumed by the lengths I went to try to trick the system. After we charged I was taken off time out.
Enabling Feature:
BlueCruise requires you push two different buttons to enable the system and for many, it took some playing around with to do it right. Now its easy but for new owners it a bit tricky to know the system is enabled
AutoPilot a single push down on the steering wheel stalk which plays displays a message on the screen and also makes a distinct noise when enabled.
Lane Changing:
Auto Pilot disengages when you change lanes and requires you reengage to resume when in the lane which was annoying and the sound was also annoying after a while even in Joe Mode (quieter)
Blue Cruise will resume when you change lanes which is very nice and soon when 1.3 comes out will change lanes for you I have heard.
Phantom Braking:
Blue Cruise has never randomly braked for no reason in my experience
AutoPilot does but its not as bad as I imagined and I got pretty good at detecting when it was going to. The main cause of the car to randomly brake was a big rig getting too close to the line the car would just slow as if it expected it to come into my lane. A few times it braked a tad harder but nothing awful. I did experience a few random times it would slow for no reason but nothing abrupt during my 700 mile trip.
Like I said both systems have pros and cons but I was very happy to get back into my car and enjoy hands free BlueCruise.
Cost:
Ford Blue Cruise 1.0 - $800 per year
Tesla AutoPilot - Included in the price of the car
Hands Free:
BlueCruise wins easily by allowing the driver to remove their hands from the steering wheel while enabled. AutoPilot requires you to keep your hands on the steering wheel and apply limited force to register your hands. Too much force and it will disengage which I found very frustrating. Blue Cruise allows the driver to manually steer the car which I do if the car next to me is on the line. If you attempt this with autopilot it disengages the system which also disengages adaptive cruise control so the regen on the brakes slows you down quickly. Most of my trip was straight so I didn't get a lot of testing with sharper turns but AutoPllot did fine maintaining the lane on turns I know BlueCruise would disengage for.
Traffic:
AutoPilot does a great job looking further ahead and slowing down gently if traffic is slowing. BlueCruise doesn't seem to see as far ahead and therefore slams on the brakes very late. My daily commute takes me past a place where traffic ALWAYS is going 70MPH to a stop and I disable the system before coming up on that and once I am in traffic I will turn it back on. I found myself doing this with AutoPilot a few times because I am so used to not trusting the car to do it smoothly but when I did autopilot did a great job. AutoPilot is slow to return back to the set speed. If someone in front of you moves out of the way AutoPilot will very very slowly return to speed whereas bluecruise will GO! This works well in BlueCruise most of the time except in heavy stop and go traffic. AutoPilot will more naturally speed up and slow down whereas BlueCurise is a bit jerky. My wife pointed out that I can push the go pedal to make autopilot speed up more quickly which was necessary at times to not piss off the people behind me.
Max Speed:
BlueCruise 81 MPH
AutoPilot 85 MPH
Overall 81MPH is plenty, but on I5 the traffic moves at a much faster pace so the 85 was a nice bonus. I did get put on autopilot time-out when I had it enabled and used the go pedal to exceed 85MPH, got this error "Autosteer unavailable for the rest of this drive Auto Steer speed limit exceeded" was the error and rebooting, and canceling the route both wouldn't let me out of timeout. My wife was very assumed by the lengths I went to try to trick the system. After we charged I was taken off time out.
Enabling Feature:
BlueCruise requires you push two different buttons to enable the system and for many, it took some playing around with to do it right. Now its easy but for new owners it a bit tricky to know the system is enabled
AutoPilot a single push down on the steering wheel stalk which plays displays a message on the screen and also makes a distinct noise when enabled.
Lane Changing:
Auto Pilot disengages when you change lanes and requires you reengage to resume when in the lane which was annoying and the sound was also annoying after a while even in Joe Mode (quieter)
Blue Cruise will resume when you change lanes which is very nice and soon when 1.3 comes out will change lanes for you I have heard.
Phantom Braking:
Blue Cruise has never randomly braked for no reason in my experience
AutoPilot does but its not as bad as I imagined and I got pretty good at detecting when it was going to. The main cause of the car to randomly brake was a big rig getting too close to the line the car would just slow as if it expected it to come into my lane. A few times it braked a tad harder but nothing awful. I did experience a few random times it would slow for no reason but nothing abrupt during my 700 mile trip.
Like I said both systems have pros and cons but I was very happy to get back into my car and enjoy hands free BlueCruise.
Sponsored