Limitations of Park Assist Pilot*
Warning
- The PAP function is supplementary driver support intended to facilitate driving – it cannot handle all situations in all traffic, weather and road conditions.
- Pay particular attention if there are people and animals near the car.
- Bear in mind that the front of the car may swing out towards oncoming traffic during the parking manoeuvre.
- Objects situated higher than the sensor detection area are not included when calculating the parking manoeuvre, which could cause PAP to swing into the parking space too early – such parking spaces should be avoided for this reason.
- PAP is not a substitute for the driver's attention and judgement. The driver is always responsible for ensuring the car is driven in a safe manner, at the appropriate speed, with an appropriate distance to other vehicles, and in accordance with current traffic rules and regulations.
A driver should be aware about the following examples of Park Assist Pilot limitations:
Parking is discontinued
- if the driver moves the steering wheel
- if the car is driven too quickly - above 7 km/h (4 mph)
- if the driver presses Cancel in the centre display
- when the anti-lock brakes or the Electronic stability control are engaged - e.g. when a wheel loses grip on a slippery road
- when the power steering works at reduced power - e.g. during cooling due to overheating (see section "Speed-dependent steering force").
Where applicable, a message in the centre display states the reason for a parking sequence being discontinued.
Important
Under certain circumstances, PAP is unable to find parking spaces - one reason for this may be the fact that there is interference with the sensors from external sound sources which emit the same ultrasound frequencies as those with which the system works.
Examples of such sources include horns, wet tyres on asphalt, pneumatic brakes and exhaust noises from motorcycles etc.
Note
Driver responsibility
The driver should bear in mind that the PAP is an aid – not an infallible, fully-automatic function. The driver must therefore be prepared to interrupt a parking step.
- The driver is always responsible for determining whether the space selected by PAP is suitable for parking.
- Do not use PAP if snow chains or a spare wheel are fitted.
- Do not use PAP if cargo items are protruding from the car.
- Heavy rain or snow may cause the system to measure the parking space incorrectly.
- During the search and check-measurement of the parking space, PAP may miss objects positioned deep in the parking space.
- Parking spaces on narrow streets are not always feasible, since the space required for manoeuvring may not be sufficient.
- Use approved tyres2 with the correct tyre pressure - this affects the ability of PAP to park the car.
- PAP bases itself on the locations of vehicles already parked nearby - if they are inappropriately parked, your own car's tyres and wheel rims may be damaged by contact with the kerb.
- Perpendicular parking spaces may be missed or offered unnecessarily if one parked car is protruding more than other parked cars.
- PAP is designed for parking on straight streets - not sharp curves or bends. For this reason, make sure the car is parallel to the potential parking spaces when PAP measures the space.