Chances are they don't. Been driving with them adjusted for a couple months now and no one has flashed me, Yet I can see better with the low beams. Funny how real life stuff works out.
Isnt that something the dealership is doing according to regulations and whatnot? In europe we have the Adaptive High Beam ("Matrix LED") which might help a little bit but as far as I saw the implementation from Toyota is pretty outdated and cannot keep up even with established "budget" brands (Skoda -> VW). It only activates at higher speeds (> 40mph) anyway
No, too subjective using that method. What exactly is "driver position height"? From a '23 Prius driver position height? From a full size pickup height? Or somewhere between? The key is to not have anyone flash you but still being able to see better, which is what I achieved.
That 40mph was in some versions of the G4 - from reading on here it changed (upwards?) during production. The G5 manual says 15km/h / 9mph according to the G5 manual, and I've certainly seen the high-beams auto-engage at such speeds, although I couldn't swear about the AHB* functionality. * Edit: Yes, I wrote AHB but meant AHS too...
@KMO Thanks for the correction - then I mixed it up somehow. How would you rate the AHS and visibility? EDIT: I meant AHS (Adaptive High Beam System) but wrote AHB (Automatic High Beams)
The AHS seems pretty effective - I've been able to just leave it on auto all the time, and haven't yet found the need to override. High beams (and low beams) come on readily enough; hard to see directly how good the high-beam shuttering is, but no indications of any complaints from oncoming traffic so far. Visibility - it's fine. I don't have experience of any modern comparators, so can't really say much more meaningful than that
No, most people will be too kind to flash you. Subjective or not, it is a good test—probably better than any other way of evaluating it. You actually see how your car appears to other drivers. I have seen too many blinding headlights lately. I am sure you don't appreciate it when you are staring into someone's headlights at a red light.
Automatic high beams (AHB) work incredibly well on my 2021 Prius Prime Limited with TSS 2.0. The image-processing AI algorithm is excellent in detecting others cars in front of it. It is one of the most useful safety features on it. 2020 and earlier had TSS 1.0. They had AHB, but perhaps the cutoff speed was different. On mine, cut-on and cutoff speeds are 34 km/h and 27 km/h, respectively. You don't need AHB at low speeds anyway. Gen 4 Prius Prime has quad LED headlights. High beams illuminate very well. Low beams are good but not great.
@Gokhan Sorry, I meant AHS not AHB. I fixed my post now but KMO got it anyway - probably hes one of the first ones here in the forum able to test it as its not available in the US. The only reviews I could find were some Corollas and b4ZX which probably has the same system.
Interesting. Adaptive high-beam system (AHS) is not available in the US, probably because of DOT regulations.
I don't think the (non-US) G5 has changed the physical AHS system significantly from the (non-US) G4s, and you can see some previous discussion of that on the forum if you search. It's still a single horizontal line of 12 LEDs for the main beam, plus 7 for the low beam, rather than a fancier much-higher-resolution 2D matrix as some cars now have. Maybe some of the software has changed though, such as speed thresholds. (The speed thresholds can be adjusted somewhat with a scantool). The basic functions remain turning off selected LEDs to "shutter" for traffic ahead, changing the horizontal spread based on speed, and directing more towards the side when cornering. A couple of functions I'm not sure that the G4 had are high-beam adjustment for rain conditions (not sure how it adjusts, but it's in the service manual and configurable!), and adjustment of low-beam cutoff based on distance to preceding car. (Including that under "AHS" is a bit of a misnomer). The latter's quite spooky - you can see the cut-off tracking the back of the car in front of you, regardless of distance, or topology.
Apparently the DOT relented on that in 2022, so you should be seeing such systems coming there soon. Bit too late for the launch of the G5 Prius, perhaps? NHTSA to Allow Adaptive Driving Beam Headlights on New Vehicles, Improving Safety for Drivers, Pedestrians, and Cyclists | NHTSA U.S. to allow advanced headlights after Toyota petition | Reuters
And the correct "driver position height" is........what? Where I live, people don't think twice about flashing you. Some are complete morons, just leaving their brights on no matter how many times they get flashed.
I find the lows great the highs too centered. I didn’t know my Safety Sense P had auto high beams. If it does how do I turn that off? I want auto leveling, the 10 Venza had that I think. I can do the high beams without help, but can’t level the beams.
If you didn't know, chances are that it is off. There is a dedicated switch to the left of the steering wheel, and the light-switch lever must be in the high-beam position. There is an indicator on the MFD when that is done and AHB is on. Incidentally, when an older couple driving a Prius Prime once talked to me because we had the same color (when I had my silver 2020 XLE), and they told me that the AHB was their favorite feature of their car. There is no leveling.