5 Modern Car Options That I Want Nothing To Do With

Today’s slew of electronic automotive wizardry is neat enough, but the potential drawbacks on some of these options are deal breakers for me.
5 Modern Car Options That I Want Nothing To Do With

Once upon a time, having a car with power windows and a moonroof was the bomb. Obviously times have changed, and while I’m certainly not against the continual advancement of technology, I’m not entirely convinced it won’t lead us to a cataclysmic, apocalyptic end. That’s why I keep all four seasons of the fabulously rebooted Battlestar Galactica nearby as a reminder of what can happen if I let my PC automatically update itself.

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Aside from the Skynet fears, more options means more weight and that’s the enemy of performance. If you’re just interested in oozing from point A to point B with as many distractions as possible, I suppose a plethora of increasingly heavy and invasive on-board equipment is fine. Then again, if such things are your primary interest in motoring, why are you even reading Car Throttle?

From an enthusiast (and perhaps a slightly conspiracy-theorist) viewpoint, these are some modern vehicle options that I’ll continue to avoid at all costs.

There is certainly an added measure of safety in systems such as this, but what if I’m driving during the apocalypse (brought on, appropriately, by technology) and I need to ram a zombie in the middle of the road before it eats my brain? The last thing I want is the car to freaking stop by itself so the zombie can get a free meal.

I’m being funny, but swap apocalypse and zombie with night and road rager. I’m not suggesting people take the law into their own hands, but I can easily see situations where ramming someone or something might be necessary. Admittedly that could be a once-in-a-lifetime situation, but what about Honda’s big 2014-2015 recall for Acura SUVs and sedans that were slamming the brakes for no reason?

I know the stats say these active collision-avoidance systems make for safer motoring, but they also encourage drivers to be less aware of their surroundings, not to mention taking human decisions out of the action. Those are bad side effects, and I’m not yet convinced the benefits outweigh the consequences.

2. Factory-installed navigation

5 Modern Car Options That I Want Nothing To Do With

There’s nothing wrong with factory-based navigation systems. Or at least, there wasn’t until aftermarket devices became fabulously effective and cheap. If you want a factory nav system on your new car, expect to pay at least £800 for it. Meanwhile, new portable Garmin systems offer all the same tricks like traffic alerts and alternate routes for a tenth of that cost.

I suppose if you buy a used car with factory nav installed it’s not so bad. That is, until you try to update it and discover said updates are infrequent and ridiculously expensive. My 2002 Infiniti has an ancient factory nav system utilizing CD-ROMs, and the newest version I can get (for just one region of the United States mind you) is from 2006 and it costs £100. That’s more than I paid for my portable Garmin GPS, which incidentally covers everything and includes free lifetime map updates that occur regularly. It’s neat to have GPS built into the car, and newer systems at least offer more coverage. But they still require ridiculously expensive map upgrades, and they just aren’t worth it.

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My first experience with self-parking was during a media event at a Ford’s world headquarters near Detroit in 2010. Journalists piled into a Lincoln with a Ford rep who explained the system, and then we all proceeded to completely fail at using the system by bumping the wheel or a pedal, bringing it all to a stop. Someone made the comment that, if we were trying to Parallel Park with this system anywhere in Chicago, we’d be shot by angry drivers or arrested for being a public nuisance. It was a joke, but it’s also scary close to the truth.

Here’s the thing. Parallel parking is not hard. We are talking about extremely basic vehicle control at low speed, and if you can’t do it, I frankly question your ability to judge distance and conduct simple maneuvering that should be mandatory to legally drive a car. And it’s not about convenience either, because even the best parallel parking systems used by people who know them well still can’t park a car quicker than a proper driver. So let’s ditch the self-parking features and force people to actually learn the fundamentals of driving.

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I spend all day on a computer. I don’t need to spend my time on the road driving one, especially one that could be hacked and driven remotely by random dudes halfway around the world. Cars are for driving; I get that modern cars can be updated over the airwaves, with the likes of Tesla pushing big feature updates while a car is parked, but there’s no denying that this technology opens up a risk of hacking.

Which brings me to a related gripe - Apple/Google/Microsoft integration into cars. My ‘droid already snaps to life at least twice a day because it thinks it hears “okay Google.” Siri at least recognises my voice better, but she still responds quite often when someone says “history,” and if a colourful conversation is taking place, you don’t want to know what she automatically searches the internet for. As for Microsoft, talk to anyone who’s used Ford’s train-wreck Sync system and you’ll realise voice tech is far from perfect. Point being, these AI-ish voice platforms are cool, but they’re still works in progress that have no business being in cars until they’re actually useful.

5. Non-defeatable stability/traction control systems

Photo: Wikimedia Commons
Photo: Wikimedia Commons

This isn’t a new option, and I’m absolutely not opposed to having both stability and traction assist on my vehicles - as long as I can disable them. And when I say disable, I mean with a simple push of a button as opposed to cycling through menus of vehicle controls.

Now I will readily admit that this has nothing to do with safety concerns or laziness behind the wheel, though in some low traction situations traction control can actually hinder acceleration. And if I’m bombing down a dirt road and come upon an unexpected bend, a quick Scandinavian Flick can keep me from understeering into a tree. But these are really lame excuses for wanting to be able to hoon behind the wheel, and that can’t happen unless traction and stability systems can be completely shut down. This time it’s not about safety, or awareness - it’s strictly for the fun of it.

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Comments

Anonymous
      1. and 5. 4 reasons I avsolutely HATE modern cars. but the WORST thing was left unmentioned. Althuogh they are related to 5.

I have been 2 times almost killed due traction control not functioning as intended.

First time traction control didn’t react in time. and when it finally woke up, it was way too late. and I ended up coming to highway in 90degree slide about 20mph and stopped blocking both lanes. Gladly, no’one was driving on that highway at that time and place,

Once TCS decided that the car was sliding, when I was driving on the highway about 75mph. It was warm sunny day, no slightest of issues with traction, and suddenly one front wheel locked up ripping the steeringwheel off my hand, turning to full left lock. and I ended up rolling over twice.

Not to mention one of the van’s in the compnay where I used to work. coming off the highway in winter trying to stop. 1 wheel locks and the 3 remaining tires don’t brake at all… blew trough a big intersection trough red lights 40mph. 3 times that van went back to dealership because of that issue. and result was “working as intended”.

Safety equipment… Endagerment equipment more likely.

02/28/2016 - 09:25 |
15 | 0
Anonymous

In reply to by Anonymous (not verified)

For some reason it doesn’t like me listing the problems. 1. 3. 4. and 5,
4 times tried to edit it but it changes always back to 1.1.1. and 5,

02/28/2016 - 09:30 |
3 | 0
DrChicane

In reply to by Anonymous (not verified)

That sounds like an ESP issue where it locks one wheel. TCS usually doesn’t have control over individual brakes. What brand was this van?

02/29/2016 - 08:20 |
0 | 0
Mihi1205

I have the XC60 with automatic braking and you can turn it off so you can ram zombies with him with no worries

02/28/2016 - 09:35 |
1 | 0
Anonymous

I respect your honesty behind #5 - I always giggle when I hear a M3 owner say something along the lines of “yeah, I disable the stability control because it gets in the way of my superior car control skills” - yeah, whatever dude.

oh, and the Volvo in the top video doesn’t have city safety, so not really a fail of the Volvo but a fail of its idiot owner

02/28/2016 - 09:38 |
0 | 0
J Bennett

My family’s new 5 series came with all these options except the un-defeatable TCS one, and in place of the factory satnav which is free, it had the upgraded 21:9 aspect ratio satnav which cost about £800, and i must say I would never not buy any of those options again: automatic breaking saved me when a c* in a tesla decided to pull across the road in front of me, I hate the window sucker things you have to use for portable sat navs, WiFi connectivity has been great because I only have 1GB of 4G in my contract, so on long journeys having wifi has saved my butt.
I suppose I could live without the park assist, but I actually use it quite a lot whenever im driving it now because its just so easy to do, when although I could do an equally good job of parking quicker by myself, with parkassist whenever I can’t be bothered, which is often, I dont have to.

But yeah, I defititely agree with number 5, not that i would ever slide the family car…. No definitely not, honest dad.

02/28/2016 - 10:30 |
7 | 1

How much does it cost to update the factory nav? There other options to portable systems than the suction mount window bracket. And I’m curious what you’re doing on long trips other than driving that requires so much data usage?

02/29/2016 - 03:52 |
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Resident Meow

I like automatic parking.

But for other people, not me.

People where I live are notoriously bad/ slow at parking and combined with narrow streets means I get stuck behind slow parkers for minutes at a time.

02/28/2016 - 10:32 |
1 | 0

I hear you, but the solution should be to get those people properly educated in vehicle control, because I bet they lack other critical driving skills such as judging distances, speed etc.

02/29/2016 - 03:49 |
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Anonymous

Did you know that the first video was a driver error?

02/28/2016 - 11:12 |
2 | 0
Jiri Zpevak
02/28/2016 - 11:44 |
2 | 0
Julian Solem

Hey you heard of the 60s? my favorite tim when cars only had the most basic electronics.

02/28/2016 - 11:44 |
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Anonymous

I have not used parallel parking since my drivers test(almost 4 years ago I think I could probably do it) but I also live in a place where hickemup trucks(pickup trucks that drive 5 to 10 below the speed limit because they are stupidly oversized and would run out of gas if they dont do that) out number people

02/28/2016 - 12:17 |
0 | 0
Vanja the lone Citroen enthusiast

Traction control is like cancer. It cuts off engine power if your wheels start slipping, and if that happens when you have to move very fast, boy you’ve got a problem.
Happened to me couple of times. Wheels slip and engine cuts off and then goes which is much slower than slipping wheels.

02/28/2016 - 12:29 |
0 | 0