Nope.
Hi all,
Does the cruise control have a speed limit function?
Thanks,
Craig.
If you are asking does the CX5 apply the brakes in CC down hill to limit the speed the answer is no.
But you limit the speed with the CC setting anyway.
I've never seen the point in a speed limit, which I believe you can override anyway with the accelerator?
What you can do is set audible warning alerts if you are exceeding the speed limit, I use these.
This sounds very similar to the feature on my prior Jaguar XF which is not to be confused with standard cruise control. Cruise control basically sets a minimum speed below which the car will not drop unless it cannot physically maintain that speed e.g. Up a hill, or unless you brake at which time the CC disengages. With CC you can depress the accelerator and exceed the set speed for as long as you desire. If you lift off the accelerator the speed will drop back to the minimum set by CC.
What I think the OP is referring to is a speed limiter whereby you set the SL at a chosen speed. At that point, no matter how far you depress the accelerator, unless you depress it quickly and vigorously, the car cannot exceed the maximum speed which has been set. However if you lift off the accelerator the speed will drop until, theoretically, the car comes to a complete halt. I think Mercedes have a similar function too.
I used to find the function very useful in areas covered by average speed cameras where I would set it, for example,at 50 and then know no matter what I did to the accelerator I couldn't exceed that average.
So, in answer to the original question the answer would appear to be No.
Hope that helps.
This sounds very similar to the feature on my prior Jaguar XF which is not to be confused with standard cruise control. Cruise control basically sets a minimum speed below which the car will not drop unless it cannot physically maintain that speed e.g. Up a hill, or unless you brake at which time the CC disengages. With CC you can depress the accelerator and exceed the set speed for as long as you desire. If you lift off the accelerator the speed will drop back to the minimum set by CC.
What I think the OP is referring to is a speed limiter whereby you set the SL at a chosen speed. At that point, no matter how far you depress the accelerator, unless you depress it quickly and vigorously, the car cannot exceed the maximum speed which has been set. However if you lift off the accelerator the speed will drop until, theoretically, the car comes to a complete halt. I think Mercedes have a similar function too.
I used to find the function very useful in areas covered by average speed cameras where I would set it, for example,at 50 and then know no matter what I did to the accelerator I couldn't exceed that average.
So, in answer to the original question the answer would appear to be No.
Hope that helps.
Well that's cleared that up.
But really if I use CC it never seems to exceed the set speed anyway, but I never use it in hilly conditions, which is usually the advise given in the manual.
Educational thread and topic for those in US for example.
The heavy use of photo radar sounds a bit oppressive, making SL important, not just conventional CC. Are the speed limits artificially low? How much leeway with speed is given before ticketing (what % over speed limit)?
The official leeway given to motorists exceeding the speed limit is 10% plus 2mph over the posted speed limit.
I have noticed on hills, that my CX-5's cruise control will drop gears when going down hills to try to reduce overspeed. Bugs the crap outta me actually, when the engine starts to scream
Doesn't apply brakes though.