Skip to main content

2021 Ford Mustang Mach-E will offer Active Drive Assist hands-free driving tech

 

Ford is serious about making the 2021 Mustang Mach-E its most tech-forward vehicle to date. The electric crossover will inaugurate a technology named Active Drive Assist that will allow drivers to safely and legally take both hands off the steering wheel when the right conditions are met. It won’t turn the Mach-E into an autonomous car, however.

Recommended Videos

Bundled into a suite of electronic driving aids named Co-Pilot360, Active Drive Assist is an evolution of adaptive cruise control with lane-centering designed to take over on divided highways. The system relies on cameras, radars, and sensors to scope out the road ahead, but Ford’s approach to the technology is similar to Cadillac’s because it only works on pre-mapped highways. This safety-first solution ensures the car knows exactly where there’s a bend or a hill, but it also means motorists won’t be able to use Active Drive Assist if they’re traveling on a road that the technology doesn’t know. Ford already mapped over 100,000 miles of highways in all 50 states and in Canada.

Ford Active Drive Assist
Image used with permission by copyright holder

Active Drive Assist won’t allow users to hop in the back seat for a quick nap or catch up on Stranger Things. Ford installed a driver-facing camera that tracks head position and eye gaze to confirm the driver is paying attention to the road ahead. The technology issues visual and audible warnings if it detects the driver is distracted.

Co-Pilot360 will also include blind spot assist, road edge detection, lane-keeping assist, intersection assist, pre-collision assist with automatic emergency braking, post-collision braking, and a reverse sensing system. Some of these features will come standard on the Mustang Mach-E, while others will be offered at an extra cost.

Active Drive Assist will be available in the third quarter of 2021, so about a year after Ford begins production of the Mustang Mach-E. Early customers who want the feature will need to order a prep package, and they’ll receive the software when it’s ready via an over-the-air update. Ford dealers will be equipped to manually upload it, too.

Every variant of the Mustang Mach-E will be eligible to receive Active Drive Assist, though pricing will be announced closer to its availability date. It will be offered on other 2021 models as well.

Ronan Glon
Former Digital Trends Contributor
Ronan Glon is an American automotive and tech journalist based in southern France. As a long-time contributor to Digital…
New 8-exhaust Bugatti Tourbillon Équipe Pur Sang makes silly look stunning
Bugatti Tourbillon Équipe Pur Sang

This newly announced Bugatti Tourbillon Équipe Pur Sang is baffling - it's either silly, or utterly stunning. Perhaps both.

Unlike, well, any car ever, this has a mighty eight exhausts. This appears to be a design choice as, let's be honest, nobody needs that many exhausts. But just imagine the noise from the V16 engine powering through all those pipes at high revs.

Read more
Here’s when Honda, Acura EV owners can start using Tesla Superchargers
2024 Honda Prologue Driving

The Tesla Supercharger network has already become widely popular with EV owners as other brands slowly adopt the popular "Tesla plug." Honda and its luxury sub-brand Acura will soon join the list of automakers who electric vehicles can be charged at one of the 20,000+ Tesla Superchargers across North America.

Starting June this year, those who own a Honda Prologue or an Acura ZDX will be able to stop by at a Tesla Supercharger station and refuel their car batteries. Since those EVs use a CCS1 charging connector, Honda said owners of Prologue and ZDX EVs will need to buy separate adapters to connect Tesla Superchargers that use a North American Charging Standard (NACS) connector.

Read more
Race car driver with paraplegia tests out new hand control system
Robert Wickens demonstrating the Bosch Electronic Hand Control System

Canadian race car driver Robert Wickens has successfully test driven an adapted Corvette, ahead of the IMSA WeatherTech SportsCar Championship next month. Wickens, who has paraplegia following an accident in 2018, used a new version of a hand control system developed by Bosch with an updated braking system.

Wickens said that the hand controls, fitted to his DXDT Racing Chevrolet Corvette Z06 GT3.R, worked like a charm during the test at Sebring International Raceway.

Read more