Nissan's ProPilot Aims to Get Your Hands Off the Wheel, but Only Just

Steph Willems
by Steph Willems

Will online videos soon emerge showing Nissan drivers taking naps or hopping into the backseat while underway? Maybe, but Nissan hasn’t been as cavalier as Tesla in playing up the abilities of its driver-assist technology. Now that an upgraded system that’s on par with General Motors’ Super Cruise and Tesla’s Autopilot is on the way, the automaker remains cautious.

ProPilot 2.0, as the name implies, is the next generation version of Nissan’s ProPilot Assist technology, and it differs from the first-gen system in one big way: drivers will be able to take their hands off the wheel.

Only under specific circumstances, Nissan warns. Like ProPilot 1.0, which debuted in the 2018 Rogue, the new system hosts an array of cameras and sensors (note: no LIDAR), a lane-centering system, and adaptive cruise control to keep the car on the straight and narrow. The 2.0 version ties the setup to the car’s navigation system, using GPS, high-definition mapping, and other nice things to allow for hands-free cruising — but only on a divided highway, and only after the driver inputs their chosen route.

Drivers must remain alert and ready to take over at a moment’s notice, Nissan says.

ProPilot 2.0 will not work on just any road or highway, the company claims. GPS keeps tabs on the vehicle’s location, allowing hands-free use only where Nissan deems the system safe. Nor will it make lane changes without the driver’s hands on the wheel. To change lanes, the driver must grasp the wheel, signal for the change, and the car waits until it finds an opening.

“When the vehicle approaches the highway exit of a predefined route, audio and visual guidance is given to notify the driver that navigated driving is about to end,” the company stated. “Once the vehicle reaches the highway exit ramp, navigated driving is disengaged and the driver takes full control of the vehicle.”

Contrast this with the free-for-all that was, and in some regards still is, Tesla’s Autopilot. Another key difference in Nissan’s approach? Like GM’s Super Cruise, a camera will monitor the driver for signs of inattentiveness.

One caveat to this story: Nissan has only announced ProPilot 2.0 for the Japanese market — specifically, the 2020 Skyline sedan, which American drivers might recognize as an Infiniti Q50. Surely, the new tech will make an appearance in the U.S.; we just don’t know when, and on which vehicles.

Since its debut, the first-gen ProPilot system has found its way into the Leaf, Rogue Sport, and Altima.

[Images: Nissan]

Steph Willems
Steph Willems

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  • HotPotato HotPotato on May 18, 2019

    I tried a Leaf with ProPilot. It works, but with an acceleration rate so gentle that instead of plowing into the obstacle like a Tesla you'll be rear-ended like a grandma.

  • Islander800 Islander800 on May 19, 2019

    “Drivers must remain alert and ready to take over at a moment’s notice, Nissan says.” Then what's the whole point?? This rush for "autonomous" vehicles is group madness.

  • Jeff I noticed the last few new vehicles I have bought a 2022 Maverick and 2013 CRV had very little new vehicle smell. My 2008 Isuzu I-370 the smell lasted for years but it never really bothered me. My first car a 73 Chevelle and been a smoker's car after a couple of months I managed to get rid of the smell by cleaning the inside thoroughly, putting an air freshener in it, and rolling the windows down on a hot day parking it in the sun. The cigarette smell disappeared completely never to come back. Also you can use an ozone machine and it will get rid of most odors.
  • Lou_BC Synthetic oil for my diesel is expensive. It calls for Dexos2. I usually keep an eye out for sales and stock up. I can get 2 - 3 oil and filter changes done by my son for what the Chevy dealer charges for one oil change.
  • Joe65688619 My last new car was a 2020 Acura RDX. Left it parked in the Florida sun for a few hours with the windows up the first day I had it, and was literally coughing and hacking on the offgassing. No doubt there is a problem here, but are there regs for the makeup of the interiors? The article notes that that "shockingly"...it's only shocking to me if they are not supposed to be there to begin with.
  • MaintenanceCosts "GLX" with the 2.slow? I'm confused. I thought that during the Mk3 and Mk4 era "GLX" meant the car had a VR6.
  • Dr.Nick What about Infiniti? Some of those cars might be interesting, whereas not much at Nissan interest me other than the Z which is probably big bucks.
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