I wholeheartedly agree!Well thatās my dumbest question I asked I think
This is what I got for saying that lolSo much for being a doer...
Donāt feel too badly. I read the manual front-to-back when I first got the car, but the āturning the knobā part didnāt stick. 8 months into ownership I discovered the rear vents were closed and ādiscoveredā could be opened with a little twist of the knobsā¦the rear air conditioning has been greatly improved!Oh man this is a case where I should have read the manual. There is a little knob on the vent I just needed to twist all the way open. Well thatās my dumbest question I asked I think
Oh I didnāt realize itās a sensor thing. Do you just end up overriding it ?It seems the normal operation of the climate control is to automatically turn on the rear system when it detects an occupant in the seat. We'll see the graphic on the curved display whether or not passengers have buckled in their seat belts.
However, when my son gets in his booster seat, it doesn't detect him and he complains the rear climate control doesn't turn on automatically. So my wife asks him do you know how to turn it on and he says yes, so she says stop complaining!
Still I don't think it's good that the car does not detect an 86lbs. occupant!
Yea, the sensor is in the middle of the seat and booster seats normally have a hallow space there so it doesn't trigger the sensor. I make sure to put the rear AC on whenever my kids are back there.It seems the normal operation of the climate control is to automatically turn on the rear system when it detects an occupant in the seat. We'll see the graphic on the curved display whether or not passengers have buckled in their seat belts.
However, when my son gets in his booster seat, it doesn't detect him and he complains the rear climate control doesn't turn on automatically. So my wife asks him do you know how to turn it on and he says yes, so she says stop complaining!
Still I don't think it's good that the car does not detect an 86lbs. occupant!