Down in Australia, I get the exact same thing for my left pillar. Since it created an alert, I presumed the car wanted me to pay attention to it, so I contacted support who told me it’s normal and safe to ignore.
It makes sense because the camera is effectively seeing a black image. On a dark country road, that’s totally expected. But most of the time it would probably have some kind of image, in which case you want to warn about a black image in case the camera is faulty which could be a safety issue.
For the cases where the driver knows it’s supposed to be dark, it’s reasonable to apply common sense and ignore that specific occurrence of the alert.
Down in Australia, I get the exact same thing for my left pillar. Since it created an alert, I presumed the car wanted me to pay attention to it, so I contacted support who told me it’s normal and safe to ignore.
It makes sense because the camera is effectively seeing a black image. On a dark country road, that’s totally expected. But most of the time it would probably have some kind of image, in which case you want to warn about a black image in case the camera is faulty which could be a safety issue.
For the cases where the driver knows it’s supposed to be dark, it’s reasonable to apply common sense and ignore that specific occurrence of the alert.