In 1958, the
Cadillac Motor Car Division of
General Motors experimented with a water-sensitive switch that triggered various electric motors to close the convertible top and raise the open windows of a specially-built
Eldorado Biarritz model, in case of rain. The first such device appears to have been used for that same purpose in a concept vehicle designated
Le Sabre and built around 1950–51. General Motors' automatic rain sensor for convertible tops was available as a dealer-installed option during the 1950s for vehicles such as the
Chevrolet Bel Air. For the 1996 model year, Cadillac once again equipped cars with an automatic rain sensor; this time to automatically trigger the windshield wipers and adjust their speed to conditions as necessary. In December 2017
Tesla started rolling out an
OTA update (2017.52.3) enabling their
AP2.x cars to utilize the onboard cameras to passively detect rain without the use of a dedicated sensor. Most vehicles with this feature have an
auto position on the control column. ==Physics of rain sensor==