This Tesla self-drove me 50km to Bunnings on its own (almost)

Tesla has just rolled out its ‘Full Self Driving (supervised)’ system to right-hand drive markets including Australia, and we recently had the chance to test the autonomous vehicle technology around Brisbane in a Model Y, which drove me over 50km without needing to touch any controls (well, almost).

Tesla will roll out FSD (supervised) to Australian customers with Hardware 4 (HW4) compatible vehicles from September onwards. The package will be available either as a 30-day free trial to new customers, or as a paid monthly subscription. Those properly convinced by the tech will also be able to fork out $10,100 to buy it upfront. See our separate news article for more details.

So how did it all go? Well, Tesla has been fine-tuning the training model behind FSD for some time in Australia and New Zealand. It needed to learn all the intricacies of Australian roads, including quirks like hook turns in Melbourne.

As part of this demonstration Tesla invited media to Queensland, where we were able to drive from Mount Cotton to the Brisbane CBD and back in FSD (supervised mode). While it isn’t a fully autonomous system (it’s only classed as a Level 2 system, which requires full driver control at all times), it doesn’t require periodic steering intervention like most other ADAS systems on the market.

It simply uses a camera within the cabin that monitors the driver to ensure they are paying attention. If the driver is distracted it will start prompting them to pay attention before disabling FSD (supervised) for the duration of the entire drive.

The curated Tesla route took us through some suburban streets around Mount Cotton before joining the freeway and heading into the CBD and back again. I didn’t want to be a pessimist, but I thought it was safe to assume Tesla tested this drive route countless times before inviting media.

So I decided to change the route once we got near the city. I diverted us to a Bunnings store to see how the Tesla would cope with a typical carpark full of dual-cab utes and people with wandering attention.