Adaptive Cruise Control - Speed Less Than Target

msenske

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Aug 29, 2024
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Spokane, WA
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2024 Toyota Land Cruiser First Edition
Hey there. I was using the adaptive cruise control functionality on one of the highway portions of my drive home from work today and I noticed that the maximum speed I would attain was always 1mph less than what I set as my target speed. As an example, I set the target speed to 70mph and the vehicle held a constant speed of 69mph and never once hit 70mph. Obviously, the workaround was to set the cruise control to 71mph if I wanted the vehicle to maintain a constant 70mph, so it isn’t as if I was unable to overcome the issue and get the desired result, but it seemed very strange to me. I’ve never had a vehicle behave this way. Has anyone else experienced the same issue?
 
Hey there. I was using the adaptive cruise control functionality on one of the highway portions of my drive home from work today and I noticed that the maximum speed I would attain was always 1mph less than what I set as my target speed. As an example, I set the target speed to 70mph and the vehicle held a constant speed of 69mph and never once hit 70mph. Obviously, the workaround was to set the cruise control to 71mph if I wanted the vehicle to maintain a constant 70mph, so it isn’t as if I was unable to overcome the issue and get the desired result, but it seemed very strange to me. I’ve never had a vehicle behave this way. Has anyone else experienced the same issue?
It’s a Toyota thing, don’t worry about it. My wife’s 22 Highlander and 24 Grand Highlander did the same thing.
 
Mine does the same - 1 mph less than set - but only sometimes. It may be related to whether vehicle is on a slight upward incline, but not sure yet. Most of the time on level road it is on target.
 
The ability of the cruise control to maintain a constant, steady speed is a function of the control system and programming of the computer. With the computing power available today, the LC should do a better job both hitting the target speed and maintaining the target speed even with gentle variations in terrain (up/down hills). My LC not only doesn't hit the target speed, but I find that the speed will vary up and down in normal use. Toyota can (and should) do better on a $70K vehicle. Yes, the LC is new, but the software running the ACC, engine/transmission programming, and MultiMedia screen feel vastly undeveloped and in need of updates right out of the starting gate (and lots of complaints in the Forum.) You can only beat a dead horse for so long, then your arm gets tired. Or something like that.
 
The ability of the cruise control to maintain a constant, steady speed is a function of the control system and programming of the computer. With the computing power available today, the LC should do a better job both hitting the target speed and maintaining the target speed even with gentle variations in terrain (up/down hills). My LC not only doesn't hit the target speed, but I find that the speed will vary up and down in normal use. Toyota can (and should) do better on a $70K vehicle. Yes, the LC is new, but the software running the ACC, engine/transmission programming, and MultiMedia screen feel vastly undeveloped and in need of updates right out of the starting gate (and lots of complaints in the Forum.) You can only beat a dead horse for so long, then your arm gets tired. Or something like that.
This isn’t an LC specific thing, this is the same TSS 3.0 system that’s in many of their other cars. Maybe I’m just used to Toyotas at this point, but I find most of the things people get worked up about to be a non issue. The old TSS 2.5 system was SIGNIFICANTLY worse than 3.0. Having now driven about 13000 miles in TSS 3.0 equipped vehicles I actually think the new system is pretty good in comparison to what most other non German manufacturers are putting out.

In what situations are you finding the speed to vary? I hate to ask, but you are aware that the cruise control is adaptive right? It will slow you down for corners and based on the cars ahead.
 
This isn’t an LC specific thing, this is the same TSS 3.0 system that’s in many of their other cars. Maybe I’m just used to Toyotas at this point, but I find most of the things people get worked up about to be a non issue. The old TSS 2.5 system was SIGNIFICANTLY worse than 3.0. Having now driven about 13000 miles in TSS 3.0 equipped vehicles I actually think the new system is pretty good in comparison to what most other non German manufacturers are putting out.

In what situations are you finding the speed to vary? I hate to ask, but you are aware that the cruise control is adaptive right? It will slow you down for corners and based on the cars ahead.
My Honda/Acura stuff is way better than the Toyota. ACC works great, transmission is butter smooth, and CarPlay integration is simpler and better. My '21 Venza was also much better, but it did not have TSS 3.0.
 
My Honda/Acura stuff is way better than the Toyota. ACC works great, transmission is butter smooth, and CarPlay integration is simpler and better. My '21 Venza was also much better, but it did not have TSS 3.0.
I’ve never been able to get comfortable in a Honda, so I have no experience there. My wife’s 22 Highlander had TSS 2.5 and I thought it was pretty terrible, the adaptive cruise was jerky if someone pulled in front of you closer than the following distance. The lane keeping/tracing sucked. I only used it briefly if I needed to open a bottle of water. The 3.0 lane tracing has been lovely, I used it most of the drive from Oregon to Colorado when I moved. The CarPlay was fine, but honestly it’s been just as rock solid in our old Grand Highlander and now LC with the updated Toyota infotainment stack.
 
I’ve never been able to get comfortable in a Honda, so I have no experience there. My wife’s 22 Highlander had TSS 2.5 and I thought it was pretty terrible, the adaptive cruise was jerky if someone pulled in front of you closer than the following distance. The lane keeping/tracing sucked. I only used it briefly if I needed to open a bottle of water. The 3.0 lane tracing has been lovely, I used it most of the drive from Oregon to Colorado when I moved. The CarPlay was fine, but honestly it’s been just as rock solid in our old Grand Highlander and now LC with the updated Toyota infotainment stack.
I agree, TSS 3.0 definitely improved some of the features (like lane keep/tracing). So, it's not all bad. My 2018 Accord could drive virtually hands free on the highway and kept me centered nearly perfectly without any jerkiness. The 2021 Venza wasn't quite at the same level. But, both cars did a better job of hitting and maintaining the speed set on the cruise control. From an engineering standpoint, it's not terribly hard to develop an automatic control system to maintain a set speed. Overall I'm very happy with my LC, but also surprised and disappointed that some aspects of the LC are clearly not at the same level as the rest of the machine. On the plus side, I think the source of the issues are all related to programming - ECM, CarPlay, TSS 3.0. All of these are fixable with updates from Toyota. Here's hoping they are listening to us and working on perfecting the LC.
 
If the speed limit is 70 I set mine to 75. Works every time! :LOL:

Sometimes mine will sit 1 mph under, it depends on the road. On interstates it seems to match up fine, one 2 lane twisty or hilly roads it sometimes does the 1 mph under, sometimes not.
 
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