The headlights are overly-bright. in the low-beam position the headlights are a painful even to glance at. when the car goes over a bump the headlights make an even more bright flash. with so many cars like this on the roads the driving conditions are becoming dangerous as the blinding headlights create both discomfort and disability glare as well as a substantial distraction. those blinding led headlights should be recalled as soon as possible.
Started the car and was immediately received 4 messages: "lkas: lane keeping assist system problem. see your dealer.". "road departure mitigation system problem. see your dealer.", "blind spot information system problem. see your dealer.", "auto high_beam problem. manual controls available. see your dealer.". turn signals did not work. hazard lights did not work. trunk release did not work. backup camera did not work. came back after 30 minutes or so and all displayed failures were gone and the trunk opened. my daughter said the brake lights were functioning when i depressed the brake and even though the backup camera did not turn on the back up sensors appeared to be operating.
For a while now, im noticing that the auto high beams on my 2018 honda accord ex-l 2.0t car isnt working. i've tried reseting the display audio unit, i've tried disabling/re-enabling auto high beam feature by pulling the high beam stick on the steering column - none of this has fixed the issue. basic obd2 (via bluetooth and android app) do no indicate any fault codes. will be taking this into the dealership to have it checked out.
Catastrophic failure. turned vehicle off, noticed alarm did not work. hours later tried to enter car and noted the following: trunk will not open, doors except for driver will not open, turn signals do not work, no high beams, all mitigations systems offline, brake system failure, back up camera doesn't work. thank goodness experienced driver could get it home and/or i was not far from home with vehicle. said car is less than a year old and has 10k mileage.
Leased 2018 honda accord in october, 25 miles later had checked engine light on,took it back to the dealer,emission hose wasn't attached properly. after 900 miles the wheel alignment went out ( i did not hit any pot holes) took it back to the dealer, according to the dealer one the rod wasn't set right, now it's january 2019 and have 4000 miles yesterday the car started to supporter and all the warning started flashing auto high beam, adaptive cruise control, collision mitigation, road departure mitigation....all this sing said see your dealer..guess what i called the dealer first thing this morning..today is january 24 2019 still waiting to hear from the dealer all this technology is totally useless... i had 2002 honda accord with 310,000 miles and no technology
After taking delivery of my accord on dec 7, 2018 i noticed that the interior lights weren't on even though the driver door was open. i thought someone had just turned the switch off. after arriving home i made sure the door switch was in the "door" position and the rear light switch was in the middle. the overhead light, rear lights still would not come on after opening the door. there was also no vanity mirror or trunk lights. a few days later the overhead lights began coming on by themselves and fade out after 15 seconds. it did it while the doors were open or closed and sometimes while starting the car. i took it to the dealership on dec 13 and the technician discovered that the lights were on some kind of timer. really? it applied power to the lights at a set interval. for a few minutes after the interval the lights worked perfectly, then shut off and would not work again until the next interval. the dealership ordered a new lighting module. the module was installed on dec 20 and the lights did the same thing. the problem is not the battery, wiring, fuses, bulbs, or light module. no one knows what's controlling the timing. the lights shouldn't be on any timer. the engineers at american honda were stumped. i now have to bring it back next week so the technicians at the dealership can talk with the engineers in japan that designed the car. on the surface this seems like a simple problem but in actuality it's incredibly complex. like having to replace the entire electrical system or computer. there are 2 more times to fix this issue before it can be called a lemon. other than the odd lighting problem my car has performed perfectly.
Tl* the contact owns a 2018 honda accord. the contact stated that the backup and brake sensor alerts failed to function and the headlights failed to illuminate brightly while driving at night. the vehicle was taken to moss bros honda (located at 27990 eucalyptus ave, moreno valley, ca 92555, (951) 486-9366) where it was diagnosed that the rearview mirror and bumper sensors failed and needed sensors. the dealer did not diagnose the headlight failure. the vehicle was not repaired. the contact received a notice for nhtsa campaign number: 18v629000 (back over prevention, visibility). the manufacturer was notified of the failures and did not assist. the approximate failure mileage was 3,488.
Haze on both led headlight lens, honda states its normal. i have never seen had this happen on a new car.