pointofdeparture said:
I think they're really pretty and would consider owning one.
That said a lot of the reviews I have seen complain that the active safety systems are absolutely MADDENING on US roads. The comments indicate they probably work great in Europe where people largely know how to drive and exercise proper highway discipline but are a frustrating mess on this side of the pond.
Anyone who has experience with one care to chime in on that point?
If you're talking about this Jalopnik hatchet job then I am here to say that reviewer could not be farther off base. First off, he's radically exaggerating the response profile of any of the nannies, and second off, by his own admission he never bothered / was too stupid to make any adjustments to them.
My wife has a 2017 S60 and I have the 2019 V60 I posted here, both with the Advanced package, which includes adaptive cruise control and the full slate of nannies. Both are AWD. We live in the metropolitan northeast / midatlantic area, so we're no strangers to crowded roads full of American drivers.
In particular he complains about the cross-traffic alert, and how it slams on the brakes and takes the car out of gear. In 2 years neither of our cars has ever done anything remotely like that, and we both back out onto a busy cut-through street at least 6 days a week. Second off, if it really does bother you that much, when the car is in reverse you can turn it off with one tap without taking your hand off the shifter. It's a dash button on our 2017 and it is a touch screen button on the 2019 that automatically pops up with the backup camera screen as soon as you shift into reverse.
In 2 years / 12,000 miles of daily driving between the 2 cars, the collision alert has popped up maybe 6 times total, and we drive on a variety of very busy commuter streets and freeways. None of those times did it overreact, and in none of those cases did it "slam on the brakes" as the idiot Jalopnik reviewer claims. It has tapped the brakes for me with the alert, reacting immediately while I was already moving my foot across anyway, and it is capable of applying full brakes to mitigate a collision if necessary. They specifically do not claim that it will completely stop the car to avoid a collision; just reduce speed as much as possible.
It is most likely to be triggered by the sudden appearance of a vehicle in your path, particularly when turning, such as when an oncoming car swings wide toward your lane, or you make a lane change into a lane with much slower traffic ahead. That is exactly what it is designed to do. If it bothers you, you can turn it off or just not get the package in the first place (it is standard on the Inscription trim, I believe).
The collision alert is part of the adaptive cruise control, and uses the same radar system that maintains the following distance. Your preferred following distance can be set via steering wheel controls, from "my defensive driving instructor would applaud" all the way down to "you probably can't see my front bumper in your mirror". This same setting adjusts the collision alert's intrusion tolerance before reaction.
The adaptive cruise works great, by the way. Very smooth, and capable of bringing the car to a full stop in traffic. To start moving again all you do is touch the throttle.
I have never knowingly triggered the traction or stability control on either of the Volvos under any situation (including putting the V60 in full droop the other day) - unlike both the 325i and the TSX they replaced. I have felt the ABS kick in once or twice, but it is very unobtrusive as well.
Speaking of brakes - the brakes on both Volvos are excellent. Smooth, good feel, responsive but not grabby.