One can set the distance by reference to which the CC adapts to a vehicle in front, mine is on the middle setting and I don't find it brakes too early. If you have a test drive you could try the different distance settings, easy to adjust by button on wheel. I don't think one can adjust the 'feel' of the reaction as e.g. on BMW where one can have 'comfort' or 'dynamic'.
There are pros and cons compared with standard CC. On A roads with lots of oncoming traffic where one could not overtake anyway it allows one just to hold station without being on and off the throttle all the time. Likewise on congested motorways. Where it is less useful is where the vehicle in front is turning off or stopping in a lay-by as the ACC can "think" that is the direction/speed of travel and brake (sometimes quite hard) when a driver controlling the throttle would steer past and maybe increase speed. Once one knows when this is apt to happen one can override the system and accelerate. There is also potential for being irritated if it is possible to overtake but the car slows down behind the slower vehicle in front and one has to pick up the speed more than one would otherwise need to do, but again with experience one can anticipate that and override by acceleration.
The 'adaptive' element stops working if the radar sensor is obscured e.g. by snow, one gets a warning on the screen but the car seems to operate as normal CC then, so it might be possible to eliminate the adapting by covering the radar sensor. I have not felt the need to try that, and Q whether there might be unintended problems in doing so.
The small disadvantages of ACC would certainly not put me off moving from a 322 to a 405 if that otherwise makes sense. Only Range Rovers since 1988
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