Diwundrin
Well-known Member
- Location
- Nth Coast NSW Australia
Heated seats?? What the hell are heated seats??
They would be as easy to market as parkas in Honolulu in most places here.
Big fat thick fluffy wool seat covers are the go. Best all year round insulators yet devised. Vacuum the dust and bugs out of them every so often and they last forever. I inherited mine 2nd hand, from a deceased Uncle's car 13 years ago, and they're still good as new.
Something went kaput with the wiring in my vehicle years ago. The 'courtesy' lights took the notion to stay on and flatten the battery. So the fuse got pulled and stayed pulled. The quote from an auto-electrician just to look for the fault turned me pale so.....
I've got a torch if I need to find stuff in the dark. I don't need to be looking in the dash box while I'm actually driving so no big deal. Amazing what whizzbang essentials you can do without.
Electric windows. Only ever had one car with those. Mazda 626. Drove it for 16 years and the only thing I really hated about it's bells and whistles was the windows. When I had to leave Mum 'parked' in it to go into a shop she couldn't put the windows up or down because the motor wasn't running. If I left 'em down you could bank on it that it would rain. If I left them up she would have to open the door to breathe. An override 'manual' window winder upper would have been nice.
I went down market after that and the 'Opel'/Vectra has manual windows, no cruise control, a radio and tape player, gauges that make sense, and minimum blinkin' lights on the dash. It's got levers to adjust stuff, not buttons to be held down for fractions of miliseconds to get settings just right. Judging by experience with the VW, and the fried courtesy lights in the Vectra, Germans don't do electrics all that well in cars, but they sure built some sturdy common sense ones.
Has this research pointed up the fact yet that one size doesn't fit all in any demographic and that 'oldies' aren't the only ones who are technologically challenged? I've always been like that, but most are far from it.
They would be as easy to market as parkas in Honolulu in most places here.Big fat thick fluffy wool seat covers are the go. Best all year round insulators yet devised. Vacuum the dust and bugs out of them every so often and they last forever. I inherited mine 2nd hand, from a deceased Uncle's car 13 years ago, and they're still good as new.
Something went kaput with the wiring in my vehicle years ago. The 'courtesy' lights took the notion to stay on and flatten the battery. So the fuse got pulled and stayed pulled. The quote from an auto-electrician just to look for the fault turned me pale so.....
I've got a torch if I need to find stuff in the dark. I don't need to be looking in the dash box while I'm actually driving so no big deal. Amazing what whizzbang essentials you can do without.
Electric windows. Only ever had one car with those. Mazda 626. Drove it for 16 years and the only thing I really hated about it's bells and whistles was the windows. When I had to leave Mum 'parked' in it to go into a shop she couldn't put the windows up or down because the motor wasn't running. If I left 'em down you could bank on it that it would rain. If I left them up she would have to open the door to breathe. An override 'manual' window winder upper would have been nice.
I went down market after that and the 'Opel'/Vectra has manual windows, no cruise control, a radio and tape player, gauges that make sense, and minimum blinkin' lights on the dash. It's got levers to adjust stuff, not buttons to be held down for fractions of miliseconds to get settings just right. Judging by experience with the VW, and the fried courtesy lights in the Vectra, Germans don't do electrics all that well in cars, but they sure built some sturdy common sense ones.
Has this research pointed up the fact yet that one size doesn't fit all in any demographic and that 'oldies' aren't the only ones who are technologically challenged? I've always been like that, but most are far from it.
