yeh i had a play with the car yesterday and noticed the Auto worked the same way as the A4. I pressed auto and then pressed Airconditioning Off (the compressor is leaking). The Auto light went out, but i noticed the fan "bar" was still missing. The fan did seem a bit annoying though, blowing a bit too hard for no reason. I ended up manually turning it down a bit. I suspect i might have had the temperature set to an impossible value, IE set to 18c when it was 20c outside or whatever.
I think theres some argument for less control in an Automatic car due to the lack of engine braking. When you lift in a manual car, you get immediate retardation of speed, which makes it feel like you've not only stopped accellerating but have actually started slowing down. The Auto doesnt seem to do that as much, as soon as you lift it drops out the lockup clutch on the converter and the engine drops to idle meaning you lose almost all engine braking.
I've always had manuals, and was REALLY against automatic boxes as i wanted the control. When i replaced my old trooper with the Range Rover, i resigned myself to the autobox and figured it wasnt a daily driven car, and so wouldnt bother me too much. It then sat for months broken and i never used it. However in the mean time i got the electric car, which obviously has no transmission, i started using that daily and quickly realised that infact, for the daily commute, there was nothing wrong with it, and i quite enjoyed not having clutch leg ache in traffic. Thus once the range rover was finally pressed into use, it felt pretty "normal". That said, the EV has fairly strong regenerative braking which comes in when you lift off the throttle, so the engine braking issue isnt realised in that car. I guess fundamentally its just different and people dont like change.
The primary thing with the range rovers auto that annoys me, is the inability to manually downshift before a manoever. EG if i want to overtake, you end up mashing the foot down and theres a significant delay while everything winds itself up and gets into the proper gear. Whereas newer "tiptronic" autos allow you to flick the box down into the correct gear before you start the overtake. It also seems to occasionally down shift too far. So it'll jam itself into 2nd at 5500rpm, and then immediately upshift into 3rd, whereas with a manual, you'd just have selected 3rd to start with.
As for the cruise control, i dont find any feelings of out of control. I'm still driving exactly as normal, my brains processing the same things and performing the same actions, the only difference is i'm not having to hold my foot wedged on the throttle in the same position for ages. End of the day 99% of driving is observations and planning. The physical controls are almost subconcious anyway
1994 Range Rover 4.6 HSE - Rough, but has an MOT!
2000 Audi A4 1.8T Quattro - Long term weekend car, 'slightly' modified...
2022 Skoda Enyaq - EV daily driver.