Cars will need fewer screens and more buttons to earn five-star safety rating in Europe
Cars will need fewer screens and more buttons to earn five-star safety rating in Europe
Ford, in their infinite wisdom, decided to make the touchscreen pressure-sensitive, but the flat physical buttons capacitive. Which means that it's super easy to accidentally turn on the driver's seat heater if you dare use the volume knob, impossible to use any of the physical buttons if you have normal gloves on, and very inaccurate to use the touchscreen with those same gloves on.
They know it, too, because when I had a 2013 Fusion, the overhead console with the dome light buttons was the same capacitive bullshit, and my 2015 Fusion has a regular button. (Apart from these design flaws, I love the car, which is why I replaced one with the other.)
We had a Civic with that kind of weird slidy up/down volume control, total garbage.
A knob for volume control has been the standard for car audio since there was car audio. If you're going to change that, why not put the clutch pedal all the way on the right?
why not put the clutch pedal all the way on the right?
Have you driven a clutch?
Control rod? Like an extra stalk off the side? Totally possible for that to be invisible from the driver's position, either from being behind a steering wheel spoke, or by blending in to the rest of the car, while being a thing you would not even be looking for, especially for something like volume controls.
It's also possible, being a "rental" car, that it had as few options as possible, including not having that control.
Ah here it is (timestamped):
https://youtu.be/V8xarINsqDg?t=245
It is invisible from the driver's seating position. And it looks like a complete afterthought. It wouldn't surprise me if it was an option that not all Clios have.