Should have gone with eyesight without nav. The nav is terrible. That combo is only available on the premium.
Welcome to the club. We have a limited but no nav/eyesight.
I find the location of the backup cam better up high. Looking down at the nav screen seems dumb to me.
I think crossover is just a term that has been created to make people feel better about getting what amounts to little more than a raised hatchback. People want an SUV, but they are too pricey, so they get a "crossover". Check out a Prius V![]()
Prius, Volt, Civic Hybrid, all started off with smaller engines and they increased their displacement a tad because they found better fuel economy with a larger displacement. Every vehicle for a given curb weight has an ideal engine displacement for most driver habits. The only people who can get away with a smaller displacement/less power motor are hypermilers because today's drivers are far more aggressive in accelerating than in the past. On the CAFE fuel economy test cycle, the Prius gets better fuel economy from the larger 1.8L engine but hypermilers have found that they get slightly better fuel economy out of the 1.5L engine in the '04-'09 Prius.
I think crossover is just a term that has been created to make people feel better about getting what amounts to little more than a raised hatchback. People want an SUV, but they are too pricey, so they get a "crossover". Check out a Prius V![]()
Chrysler did it right, physical buttons and touch screen.
I think crossover is just a term that has been created to make people feel better about getting what amounts to little more than a raised hatchback. People want an SUV, but they are too pricey, so they get a "crossover". Check out a Prius V![]()
Honda/Acura had it right 10 years ago with their nav systems. Touchscreen + physical controls for audio and HVAC on the center console + redundant physical controls for audio/bluetooth on the steering wheel.
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Yeah, sorry, I meant to say interior temp. But what I said still stands. If the inside of the car is 75 and you have the AC set to 70, the fan speed will be slower than if you have the AC set to 60. The system tries to balance the fan speed so that you get cooling while minimizing fan noise. However, if you set the temperature knob down at 60, the system will assume you don't care about fan noise and run the fan on full blast.
That's how it works in my Accord, anyway.
I think crossover is just a term that has been created to make people feel better about getting what amounts to little more than a raised hatchback. People want an SUV, but they are too pricey, so they get a "crossover". Check out a Prius V![]()
I don't like automatic climate control because on cold days, it causes the engine to warm up slower. Even if I turn off the climate control, if the last setting was "hot", the valve for the heater core is still actuated so heat will be running through there unless I manually adjust the temperature for "cold", wait for it to close the valve then shut off the system. On a manual system, I just flick the heat all the way to cold until it's fully warmed up then switch back to heat. Obviously this could be automated to be done but it isn't.
This has to be car dependent.
The two cars I had with auto climate would basically turn the system off until the car warms up.
Great review. I was waiting for HR-V but am taking it off the list.
This has to be car dependent.
The two cars I had with auto climate would basically turn the system off until the car warms up.
I don't like automatic climate control because on cold days, it causes the engine to warm up slower. Even if I turn off the climate control, if the last setting was "hot", the valve for the heater core is still actuated so heat will be running through there unless I manually adjust the temperature for "cold", wait for it to close the valve then shut off the system. On a manual system, I just flick the heat all the way to cold until it's fully warmed up then switch back to heat. Obviously this could be automated to be done but it isn't.
On my car, the system waits for the heat to reach a "warm" temperature before it turns on the fan, so that it's not blowing ice-cold air in your face. This typically takes around 5 minutes on a cold day (< 30F outside). Usually the temp needle has just started to move around this time.
Sure, the heat starts coming on before the car is fully warmed up, but I prefer that to waiting an extra 5 minutes for the car to be fully warmed up (needle at the middle of the temp gauge) before any heat comes into the cabin. That would be annoying to deal with every day during the winter. Besides, after the heat comes on, it only takes about 5 minutes for the engine temp to reach the middle mark on the gauge, so it's not like the delay in warming up the engine is anything significant, if at all.
Needs more ventilation for the passenger, maybe a second row of vents.
