TbonePdx
Registered Member
Forgive me, but my car has already had a few electronic gremlins ever since I pulled her off the lot, so I'm not sure if this is faulty system or if it's performing as intended (and the manual wasn't very much help).
On my '15 fully-loaded 3.8, the lighting/turn signal stalk on the left side the steering wheel has the following options (from bottom position to upper position):
1. DRL off
2. Auto
3. Parking lights on
4. Headlights on
First of all, this car has some great-looking white LED DRLs. But the DRLs mentioned in #1 are the amber-colored parking lights in the front grille, not the LED DRLs. With that in mind, here's what the switches do in my car: #1 and everything is completely off...fine. #2 is auto, which means the headlights will be off when it's light outside and will come on when it's dark, but the LED DRL's are off during the day and the outdated amber parking lights are on (who doesn't want these gorgeous LED DRLs on during the day?). #3 indeed turns on the true parking lights as well as the LED DRLs...but will NOT turn the headlights on automatically when it gets dark. #4 Obviously this turns on the headlights (and the LED DRLs) all the time, light or dark.
So. On #2 I have the outdated amber parking lights (what Hyundai considers DRLs), no LED DRLs, the headlights will come on at night, BUT...every time I try to manually turn on my high beams the stupid auto-high beams feature comes on (but the high beams don't) and the only way I can manually activate my high beams is to manually bump the stalk forward TWICE. This turns off the auto-high beam feature (temporarily) but when you turn the high beams off and try to turn them on again you've got to push the stalk forward TWICE again. The only way to be able to use the high beams like a normal person would (you know, turn them on with ONE push of the stalk) is to put the switch into #4, which is silly because now I'm driving around all day with the head lights on which totally defeats the purpose of having an "auto" setting that senses the ambient light and activates the headlights for you, like most every car I've owned in recent years. So this leaves me the choice of never using option #1 or #2 if I want my LED DRLs on and forever manually turning the switch between #3 and #4 as daylight/darkness requires (and hoping I don't forget to turn them on when it gets dark). It makes me appreciate all these newer luxury cars I see driving around at night with their DRLs and/or parking lights on but no headlights (which I always assumed were idiots that didn't know how their lights worked). Anyway, I've had other cars with LED DRLs and automatic high beams and they worked beautifully, not sure why Hyundai did it this way.
Sure would appreciate a second or third opinion. Congratulations if you could keep up with my rant!!!
Tony
On my '15 fully-loaded 3.8, the lighting/turn signal stalk on the left side the steering wheel has the following options (from bottom position to upper position):
1. DRL off
2. Auto
3. Parking lights on
4. Headlights on
First of all, this car has some great-looking white LED DRLs. But the DRLs mentioned in #1 are the amber-colored parking lights in the front grille, not the LED DRLs. With that in mind, here's what the switches do in my car: #1 and everything is completely off...fine. #2 is auto, which means the headlights will be off when it's light outside and will come on when it's dark, but the LED DRL's are off during the day and the outdated amber parking lights are on (who doesn't want these gorgeous LED DRLs on during the day?). #3 indeed turns on the true parking lights as well as the LED DRLs...but will NOT turn the headlights on automatically when it gets dark. #4 Obviously this turns on the headlights (and the LED DRLs) all the time, light or dark.
So. On #2 I have the outdated amber parking lights (what Hyundai considers DRLs), no LED DRLs, the headlights will come on at night, BUT...every time I try to manually turn on my high beams the stupid auto-high beams feature comes on (but the high beams don't) and the only way I can manually activate my high beams is to manually bump the stalk forward TWICE. This turns off the auto-high beam feature (temporarily) but when you turn the high beams off and try to turn them on again you've got to push the stalk forward TWICE again. The only way to be able to use the high beams like a normal person would (you know, turn them on with ONE push of the stalk) is to put the switch into #4, which is silly because now I'm driving around all day with the head lights on which totally defeats the purpose of having an "auto" setting that senses the ambient light and activates the headlights for you, like most every car I've owned in recent years. So this leaves me the choice of never using option #1 or #2 if I want my LED DRLs on and forever manually turning the switch between #3 and #4 as daylight/darkness requires (and hoping I don't forget to turn them on when it gets dark). It makes me appreciate all these newer luxury cars I see driving around at night with their DRLs and/or parking lights on but no headlights (which I always assumed were idiots that didn't know how their lights worked). Anyway, I've had other cars with LED DRLs and automatic high beams and they worked beautifully, not sure why Hyundai did it this way.
Sure would appreciate a second or third opinion. Congratulations if you could keep up with my rant!!!
Tony