High Beam Assist: Improved Target Detection

Israel

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Lucid Tourning
High Beam Assist: Anyone familiar with this feature? I recently upgraded to version 2.4x and noticed the patch notes mentioning improved target detection, which excited me as it might be similar to Audi's Matrix LED lighting system.


This system:


•⁠ ⁠Keeps high beams on while selectively shutting off LEDs for oncoming traffic
•⁠ ⁠Adjusts LED patterns to avoid reflecting off signage, reducing glare


Having had this feature on my previous Audi, I know how valuable it is, especially for drivers like myself who frequently navigate dark roads with deer crossings. If Lucid implements this, it would be fantastic!


Does anyone have insights on Lucid's High Beam Assist capabilities?
 
It does not turn on automatically. Engage the high beams by pushing the stalk, and from that point, as long as you have the setting turned on in settings, it should do the right thing.
 
It does not turn on automatically. Engage the high beams by pushing the stalk, and from that point, as long as you have the setting turned on in settings, it should do the right thing.
Thanks Joe.
 
High Beam Assist: Anyone familiar with this feature? I recently upgraded to version 2.4x and noticed the patch notes mentioning improved target detection, which excited me as it might be similar to Audi's Matrix LED lighting system.


This system:


•⁠ ⁠Keeps high beams on while selectively shutting off LEDs for oncoming traffic
•⁠ ⁠Adjusts LED patterns to avoid reflecting off signage, reducing glare


Having had this feature on my previous Audi, I know how valuable it is, especially for drivers like myself who frequently navigate dark roads with deer crossings. If Lucid implements this, it would be fantastic!


Does anyone have insights on Lucid's High Beam Assist capabilities?
I use it routinely on darker, windy roads. I can confirm that it's quicker to dim the lights with oncoming traffic now than prior to the update.

As Joe said, you engage the high beams as you normally would...the auto-dimming is a configurable setting in the menus, it's not something you do every time.

I do recall there were times where highly reflective signs (such as those on the edge of the road during corners) would trick the system into thinking there was oncoming traffic due to the reflection of your own lights. Not sure if that has improved or not, would have to test more, but I know for sure that it's dimming the lights sooner than it used to in the of oncoming traffic.
 
It does not turn on automatically. Engage the high beams by pushing the stalk, and from that point, as long as you have the setting turned on in settings, it should do the right thing.
Thank you for your input! I appreciate your clarification on the automatic high beam feature. However, my question specifically relates to whether Lucid's High Beam Assist offers advanced capabilities similar to Audi's Matrix LED system, such as:

•⁠ ⁠Selective LED shutdown for oncoming traffic
•⁠ ⁠Adaptive LED pattern adjustment to avoid signage glare
•⁠ ⁠Maintaining high beams without fully dimming

Hope someone can shed more light on this.
 

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Thank you for your input! I appreciate your clarification on the automatic high beam feature. However, my question specifically relates to whether Lucid's High Beam Assist offers advanced capabilities similar to Audi's Matrix LED system, such as:

•⁠ ⁠Selective LED shutdown for oncoming traffic
•⁠ ⁠Adaptive LED pattern adjustment to avoid signage glare
•⁠ ⁠Maintaining high beams without fully dimming

Hope someone can shed more light on this.

I think the first two of those features would be wildly difficult to implement in the first place... and even more so as add-ons. As I understand it, Lucid's approach is to have dark spots built into the headlamps, such that their 'darkness' is targeted toward both the windshields of oncoming traffic and the rear and side view mirrors of the traffic you are following. I'm guessing that this is at least some of the target detection they are mentioning.

I have always been impressed with how well the car illuminates the road in many conditions without me ever being 'flashed' by oncoming traffic.
 
Thank you for your input! I appreciate your clarification on the automatic high beam feature. However, my question specifically relates to whether Lucid's High Beam Assist offers advanced capabilities similar to Audi's Matrix LED system, such as:

•⁠ ⁠Selective LED shutdown for oncoming traffic
•⁠ ⁠Adaptive LED pattern adjustment to avoid signage glare
•⁠ ⁠Maintaining high beams without fully dimming

Hope someone can shed more light on this.
Have not seen anything that would indicate Lucid has a matrix LED system - physically you have to actually have a matrix to do this. If the Air's lights are a matrix, they haven't mentioned it anywhere that I've seen, but I surely haven't seen everything.
 
Thank you for your input! I appreciate your clarification on the automatic high beam feature. However, my question specifically relates to whether Lucid's High Beam Assist offers advanced capabilities similar to Audi's Matrix LED system, such as:

•⁠ ⁠Selective LED shutdown for oncoming traffic
•⁠ ⁠Adaptive LED pattern adjustment to avoid signage glare
•⁠ ⁠Maintaining high beams without fully dimming

Hope someone can shed more light on this.
I don’t believe the Air headlights are Matrix so they’re not smart enough to turn off specific LED’s to avoid blinding oncoming drivers while still keeping the surrounding area lit up like a christmas tree.

For the size of the headlights though, the Lucid lights are certainly impressive, just not Matrix.
 
Lucid uses a micro lens array with I believe 10 segments. There is some ability to adapt to oncoming cars but limited. The lights do adapt to steering input to better light the road in turns.
 
Lucid uses a micro lens array with I believe 10 segments. There is some ability to adapt to oncoming cars but limited. The lights do adapt to steering input to better light the road in turns.
Do they? I always noticed that in my other vehicles, but I don't notice it in the Lucid. I do notice the Lucid lights up the sides all the time a lot more than most headlights.
 
Please keep in mind that even Matrix and Digital headlights or other intelligent headlights had to be dumbed down aka disabled in the US, so all these cool videos of what these headlights could do was not available here. The DOT just changed their regulations in 2022 to allow them but even until today, Mercedes, BMW, etc, have not enabled them due to some remaining spec restrictions.

So the Audi matrix lights mentioned by the OP never actually worked in the the US. That said, there are plenty of people that can code the headlights and enable the Euro functionality. Typically called Anti-Dazzle for BMW or ILS+ for Mercedes.

The Lucid in Europe features the adaptive driving beam which allows for similar functionality as the Matrix light, albeit with less precision. I don't recall if that feature is the same in the US.
 

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Please keep in mind that even Matrix and Digital headlights or other intelligent headlights had to be dumbed down aka disabled in the US, so all these cool videos of what these headlights could do was not available here. The DOT just changed their regulations in 2022 to allow them but even until today, Mercedes, BMW, etc, have not enabled them due to some remaining spec restrictions.

So the Audi matrix lights mentioned by the OP never actually worked in the the US. That said, there are plenty of people that can code the headlights and enable the Euro functionality. Typically called Anti-Dazzle for BMW or ILS+ for Mercedes.

The Lucid in Europe features the adaptive driving beam which allows for similar functionality as the Matrix light, albeit with less precision. I don't recall if that feature is the same in the US.
Also seems when the bill was passed to enable adaptive headlights NHTSA decided to take it a step up from what the rest of the world was already doing an impose stricter rules meaning that all the "matrix ready" headlights in cars in the US today can't actually be enabled because they don't meet NHTSA's standards

"NHTSA’s rules require the ADB headlights to respond extremely swiftly after detecting another vehicle within reach of the lights, much faster than other standards require in the EU and Canada. Also much faster than a human could switch off an ordinary high beam headlight. They also dictate extreme narrow lines between bright and dark regions.

Ultimately, the NHTSA regulations require completely new headlamp designs for the US, Larsen said. This means the ADB capabilities engineered into headlights already on Audi and Mercedes cars in the US, for instance, will probably never get switched on"

 
Also seems when the bill was passed to enable adaptive headlights NHTSA decided to take it a step up from what the rest of the world was already doing an impose stricter rules meaning that all the "matrix ready" headlights in cars in the US today can't actually be enabled because they don't meet NHTSA's standards

"NHTSA’s rules require the ADB headlights to respond extremely swiftly after detecting another vehicle within reach of the lights, much faster than other standards require in the EU and Canada. Also much faster than a human could switch off an ordinary high beam headlight. They also dictate extreme narrow lines between bright and dark regions.

Ultimately, the NHTSA regulations require completely new headlamp designs for the US, Larsen said. This means the ADB capabilities engineered into headlights already on Audi and Mercedes cars in the US, for instance, will probably never get switched on"

Right. As a result, cars in the US have inferior headlights :(
That said, it's easy to code the headlights of the German Cars (since 2014 or so) to enable all intelligent adaptive beam functions since the actual hardware has been in these cars all along, whether its Matrix, Laser or digital.
 
Thank you for your input! I appreciate your clarification on the automatic high beam feature. However, my question specifically relates to whether Lucid's High Beam Assist offers advanced capabilities similar to Audi's Matrix LED system, such as:

•⁠ ⁠Selective LED shutdown for oncoming traffic
•⁠ ⁠Adaptive LED pattern adjustment to avoid signage glare
•⁠ ⁠Maintaining high beams without fully dimming

Hope someone can shed more light on this.
The short answer is: no.

The longer answer is: it wasn’t legal in the US when Lucid designed and built the Air, and the micro-lens array is wildly impressive in its own right. That said, I do wish every car had matrix headlights.

P.S. nice pun with “shed more light on this” ❤️
 
I am a simple person, I feel like more individual lights and components just means smaller parts that can fail and ruin the overall look. Like the trucks you see on the road with the light led bars in between the rear brake lights and some of the led's are burnt out or bad, looks incomplete and cheap lol
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