What were they thinking with these window buttons?!

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=04fz__j4V-4

Comments

32 responses to “What were they thinking with these window buttons?!”

  1. @PyjterChachar Avatar
    @PyjterChachar

    Bo to jest VW tak na prawdę

  2. @Not.The.Avg.Smitty Avatar
    @Not.The.Avg.Smitty

    “But I have discovered the secret, Henry: hot ice! That’s right: hot ice. I heat up… the ice cubes! It’s the best of both worlds!”
    Rookie of the year engineers

  3. @MrJordanwain Avatar
    @MrJordanwain

    Nooooo!!! It’s a carryover from the ID4. Funny thing is the ID3 facelift has already gone back to 4 buttons 😂

    1. @Vano233 Avatar
      @Vano233

      No it’s not

    2. @patriotbarrow Avatar
      @patriotbarrow

      No it hasn’t. They retained the two button headache.

    3. @stevenmoran4060 Avatar
      @stevenmoran4060

      But Ford don’t make ID3 or 4!
      You VDG clowns need to keep up with the facts!

  4. @jamesk3565 Avatar
    @jamesk3565

    100% a vw switch

    1. @Ce0ammer Avatar
      @Ce0ammer

      VW and Ford are teaming up on multiple cars. Unbelievable that they are allowed to, should be stopped by the EU and the Federal Trade Commission.

      But at last Hitler and Ford get to work together and not just admire each other.

    2. @arnausil Avatar
      @arnausil

      Yep. This comes from the MEB platform from VW. ID3, ID4, ID7, Cupra Born, and this EV Ford Explorer (which is basically a VW) have it

  5. @sebastianstoica578 Avatar
    @sebastianstoica578

    Simple, it’s cheaper. A lot of car manufacturers simply don’t care about their customers’ comfort or safety.

    1. @Ce0ammer Avatar
      @Ce0ammer

      Ford pinto?

  6. @otacon5648 Avatar
    @otacon5648

    Ford have always been super stingy with putting rear electric windows in their cars. There are top of the range, more than £20k when new, five door Focus ST3’s out there with manual rear windows. Sounds stupid but it would be a deal breaker for me. It’s a TOTR car, not a Yugo.

    1. @otacon5648 Avatar
      @otacon5648

      @@PhilbyFavourites ahaha my Mum had one in the mid 90’s and even though it was only about 10 years old, my Dad bought it for £500 🤣

  7. @user-yn5sk5ru5g Avatar
    @user-yn5sk5ru5g

    Why not? 🤷

  8. @kamilb8232 Avatar
    @kamilb8232

    As an automotive engineer, I can tell you all this annoying touch stuff is done for one reason and one reason only. Cost. The more you can cram into capacitive or resitive touch buttoms (or even better, screen) the cheaper it is. The fact that people prefer mechanical buttons isn’t lost on us. If the reduction in cost is high enough to counter the small hit in customer dissatisfaction, it will be pushed through.

    All automakers are guilty of this from GM/Ford with Cue/MyFordTouch to Honda and their removal of the volume knob on the 10th generation Civic to VW with their recent Golf/iD products. Even cars were seemingly cost is almost of no concern (think Ferrari Roma or Porsche Cayenne) there is touch buttons everywhere. There is always back and forths when automakes push a little to hard with it and pull back for a period of time, but the general trend is still towards touch as time goes on. If someone else does it (Tesla) and undercuts you in price or shows massive margins, the industry is forced to follow.

    1. @lepuluke Avatar
      @lepuluke

      Even more ironic that „cheap“ brands like Hyundai still manage to build mechanical buttons. Almost as if they try to make good cars

    2. @kamilb8232 Avatar
      @kamilb8232

      @@lepuluke Hyundai is guilty of this too. Their subsidiary Kia you have to toggle between HVAC and radio touch controls for many of their vehicles. Cleverly sharing the knob for both functions. While I like this clever design, initial customer impressions and general response to this cost saving measure hasn’t been well recieved.

    3. @SelmanYasirSezgin Avatar
      @SelmanYasirSezgin

      Claim that this is done only for the cost reduction is simply wrong. This is simply a better design. It mostly prevents accidentally opening the rear windows, which I sometimes do on a 4 button setup. This is a simpler and more useful design.

    4. @kamilb8232 Avatar
      @kamilb8232

      @@SelmanYasirSezgin I would never considered anything that doesn’t provide direct feedback and tactility to be a better design. Even the youngest of children can figure how things work though those simple interactions as they feel the most natural.

      Instead you may be lowering your rear windows with accidentally touches. In addition, even when you intend to press it you will shift your eyes for the LED feedback to verify you’re touching the correct area. The number one customer complaint and frustration regarding touch inputs is needing to shift your visual focus on it and not feeling confident on the feedback purely from feel.

    5. @B4Uagain Avatar
      @B4Uagain

      They lost me as a long time customer.

  9. @David-he6uj Avatar
    @David-he6uj

    Can we talk about the loudest windows in the history of the world???

  10. @richardoeser5643 Avatar
    @richardoeser5643

    It probably saves them 2 cents. American vehicles are pitiful. If it wasn’t for the government bail outs they would all be out of business

  11. @marvinsamuels1237 Avatar
    @marvinsamuels1237

    It’s a shame they went the whole hog basing it on the VW ID.3/.4 platform.

  12. @micrograham Avatar
    @micrograham

    That’s smart. Honestly, there’s no need for 4 switches. Sure, it’s “cheaper,” but I actually prefer this.

  13. @MKRM27 Avatar
    @MKRM27

    Really good idea.

  14. @alfrredd Avatar
    @alfrredd

    Definitely a leftover from VW

  15. @lenardgor Avatar
    @lenardgor

    Basically never use rear windows… This is clean

  16. @ErnestoNevarez Avatar
    @ErnestoNevarez

    My old 2005 Opel Vectra had those, took me 1 day to get used to them. Never saw them again until the ID.4 came out.

  17. @Danspy501st Avatar
    @Danspy501st

    Kinda reminds me about the Audi I drove today. I havent been able to find out where or how to adjust the volume on the touch screen part. I found it on the steering wheel, which is great when you driving

    However, not so great if you holding at like a parking lot, and your passanger needs to make a phone call. You cant turn the volume down on the steering wheel as you already turned your engine off to be ready to get out

  18. @alancobbin Avatar
    @alancobbin

    Someone’s in the new Ford Explorer

  19. @erwin6395 Avatar
    @erwin6395

    See also Volkswagen ID 4….

  20. @jerryfieldz7701 Avatar
    @jerryfieldz7701

    Thats cheap as hell. I prefer each window to have their own separate button versus this.

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