- Joined
- Jan 14, 2022
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- 2,998
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- Location
- Scottsdale Arizona
- Cars
- Genesis GV60 Performance
The best would be that foot opening thing in SUVs and minivans...
Yes. I have that in my current sedan.
The best would be that foot opening thing in SUVs and minivans...
Have it in my E-class. Once I figured out where the car wants my foot, it works 90%+ first try and 100% within 3 tries. It's a really nice feature and will miss it, but certainly not a dealbreaker.I have that for the trunk of my M5 and can never get it to work, well maybe 1 out of 100 times.
Nav issue will be mute once Apple CarPlay/Android Auto is available, even on our current car, we generally use Phone Navigation, for one, you have to pull over and stop car to set car nav anyway and passenger can easily work with phoneIt does always pick the fastest route. However, it does not offer alternative routes (such as our Tesla and Googlemaps do). A couple of times I have wanted to take rural roads across Florida, but the Nav only offers interstate routes. I've had to use a workaround by programing a route to a mid-point town on the rural route and then program the final leg once I hit that mid-point.
Have it in my E-class. Once I figured out where the car wants my foot, it works 90%+ first try and 100% within 3 tries. It's a really nice feature and will miss it, but certainly not a dealbreaker.
I'm with the complainers on this one. Have the same issue with the Tesla MS. When you spend this kind of money on a car, and you walk up to the car carrying an armload of stuff, in the rain, with only one free pinky, expecting the handles to pop out.....it is really annoying to put everything down and fish around for that stupid fob. That's not the UX that Elon or Peter are aiming for. Don't have an Air yet, but the MS requires a physical fob press about 40% of the time, and Murphy's law dictates that those 40% are the least convenient moments.![]()
Anecdotal information would seem to indicate they are not running a legacy system, but have a Bluetooth implementation. I have no information to back this up.
Some of you guys are starting to scare people away for some issues like car not opening even with a key fob in your pocket. God forbid that you have to take the fob out of your pocket to open the door until they get this corrected.
Well if people expect the car to unlock without taking a fob out of a pocket, then those people should not buy this car.
Sounds like you would rather the OP doesn't post the facts so people get duped. People shouldn't have to take the fob out of the pocket. That is early 1990s/early 2000s UX.
I have reserved a Pure (partly to delay so Lucid can fix the software) but I took a test drive this past week in a GT and I concur regarding the drive quality...makes me willing to wait (and hope) that Lucid figures out the software.Nice to know about drive quality, I am still 4-6 months from getting my AGT, hope most software issues have resolved by then
Everything you describe here has been true of Teslas for over a decade, and they can’t keep up with demand.The Lock/unlock situation is a major security concern anywhere. Stuck here in California, it's a matter of life or death. If it works consistently but unlocks all doors, there is no way my wife is driving that thing. As for Nav, many legacy car companies have been getting lazy over the last few years and are becoming dependent on a cell phone connection. If it's cell phone dependent, they are most likely not to work in the most needed situations. In a unfamiliar location with poor cell service (or none), dark, high crime, poorly marked roads, unreadable signage and/or remote. Again, a major safety issue. anything that is common in a $50K car that is missing in a $100k+ car or works poorly or intermittently is a massive failure that the general public will not accept. Worse, the mear reports of it are likely to leave a bad taste in their mouth that most established car companies take decades to survive (think Audi and unintended acceleration).
The Teslas all look terrible outside. Inside they are cheaper then most $20k cars with a style only a computer gamer could enjoy. All backed by a company with the worst customer service I've dealt with in 40 years and a complete disdain for their customers. Both current and potential.
- A way to turn off the car (Press park a second time)
To be fair, I doubt they had any real inventory to sell.![]()
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I feel the same about Range Rover dealership. Last year, I took my wife in to checkout show room SUVs and hope for a test drive. She found Defender model is quite handsome to own. But no one bothered asked us any question or greet us for 15 minutes after we walked in. In fact. They treat us invisible. Then I realize maybe it’s my casual T-shirt wasn’t worth their time. So I took my wife out to consider Navigator or Model-X only instead. I couldn’t stand British snub style. I certainly hope Peter Rawlinson isn’t one of them.
It would be easy to implement a second press of the Park button to turn the car off or put it in an exit mode status. Those who like it the way it is need do nothing. I disagree that it is "legacy" to put the car into a different state once ready to exit. The Air will direct audio to the car when my phone rings as I am exiting, pod casts keep playing when I'm out of the car. There are reasons to indicate I am done with the car for now and put the vehicle into a different state. Call it "exit mode" then it can be "new" instead of legacy.One reason I’m buying the Air is to get away from this concept. It’s a terrible and legacy idea to have an on/off button.
My wife feels the same way. Lucid has yet to make a single interface update of any significance and Lock/Unlock while much better than it was in December of 2021, is far from working "instantly and always". I am in the middle of a relocation and have been without the Lucid for several weeks, I am missing it. Looking forward to picking it up in Dallas and continuing cross country road trip on June 6.The Lock/unlock situation is a major security concern anywhere. Stuck here in California, it's a matter of life or death. If it works consistently but unlocks all doors, there is no way my wife is driving that thing.
The good thing is that every single owner here provides quite a bit of feedback both negative and positive. If we were really fanbois you would only see positive reviewsFor now, we shall all just have to wait and see. We'll make money on the lawsuits to come (safety). I find that most people under 30 and many in their thirties are willing to accept all sorts of crap while they cant wait to throughout what works best simply because they didn't come up with it.
As for Tesla, enormous government intervention and the gee whiz effect like bit coin. The worlds biggest, most obvious Ponzi scheme. Any realistic unbiased assessment for Tesla cars as actual cars has to find them as crap. Fast but all things considered, very much crap. Traditional car companies are bending over to get on the EV band wagon. A only slightly deeper dive reveals why. Long term cheap to make, the chance to eliminate the middle man and enormous backside profit requiring very specific skills/infrastructure and substantial resources.
You are most correct. It is the future the industry wants. Never forget demand dictates where industries go in the end. Unless you believe Communism is a valid economic model.
The video game industry, primarily dominated by consumers less then 30 years old.
Lets still try to point out any Lucid failings and hope to force them to address their failings in a comprehensive and timely manner. If they are the not even Beta ready devices that I fear, do you think they'll easily and quickly return my deposits? I've been eyeing a Hell Cat Red Eye. That Escalade V starts taking orders (not reservations) in a few weeks.