The state of new cars, a non Emira rant!

What I’d really like would be an Evora with the Emira body and interior - but without all the Emira screens, driver aids, etc.
 
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What I’d really like would be an Evora with the Emira body and interior - but without all the Emira screens, driver aids, etc.
For me, I think the ‘Emira hits the good balance. I personally like the screens and the connectivity (I use mine quite a bit (when it’s not in the garage), not as an daily, but much more than a weekend car) and the driver aids are relatively small and not obtrusive.
 
What I’d really like would be an Evora with the Emira body and interior - but without all the Emira screens, driver aids, etc.
The Emira doesn't really have any driver aids (accept for park distance)...I agree it would be nice to have real analogue gauges but the center screen for carplay is really nice to have.
 
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So the lane departure etc stuff in the manual isn’t in the US cars?

I also want the Evora old school parking brake instead of the Emira electric one, so I could run 18” wheels.
 
Every new car made is loaded with finicky electronics and dozens of computer modules controlling every system due to federal standards and the cheapness of new technology. Some base models are able to limit the amount of electronics with simplicity but it's largely unavoidable. Drivers cars do the best job at concealing the electronics from the driver.
 
So the lane departure etc stuff in the manual isn’t in the US cars?

I also want the Evora old school parking brake instead of the Emira electric one, so I could run 18” wheels.
US spec Manual V6 has no lane departure stuff. The only "driver aid" is the parking sensors which are kinda nice for tight spaces
 
Love this topic! I completely agree with the original post. As a Human Factors Engineer, I loathe today's vehicles. Simple tasks like changing the temp that took three seconds and zero eyesight to twist the knob in my 2000 Nissan Pathfinder, now take 13 clicks, an embedded touchscreen slide, or pressing a virtual button (i.e. Dodge Durango, Volvo XC90, Acura MDX, and many others). My current DD is an Acura MDX and the lane keep assist sucks, the voice control is useless, the cruise control is weak at best, the touchscreen resolution is crappy, rain-sensing wipers don't work, and the list goes on.

I recently drove a Tesla Model 3 to try and understand the Kool-Aid drinkers that love them. I hated it. I wanted to adjust the steering wheel and it is three pages deep on a touchscreen.

I recently bought a 2017 Mini Cooper and welcome the simple controls and basic interfaces. Hoping to get a similar sense of joy with my Emira Turbo...which I hope to have by the end of the month.
 
On “The Importance of Loving the Daily Driver”.

From 2013 - 2017 I had a Cadillac ATS. During that time there was not a trip I wasn’t excited to take nor an errand I did not want to run: the car was engaging and brilliant to drive. I didn’t own it: it was on a 4 year lease. When 2017 rolled around, I wanted to purchase a new ATS. I didn’t want to buy the car I had off lease because I wanted a few more bells and whistles and my buyout was a little pricey. Alas, by 2017 GM had done what GM does, and had stopped offering the manual transmission on the ATS in a high trim level (except for the ATS -V, and that was a bit out of my price range at the time.)

So, I bought a new Audi A4 which I purchased to my specifications. I thought it would be a worthy ATS replacement. Alas, very soon after purchase it became true that there was not a trip that I was excited to take nor an errand that I wanted to run. Don’t get me wrong, it was a very nice car: but it was an appliance, devoid of character, almost to the point of it being irritating to drive. To make matters worse it developed more creaks and rattles in 4 months than the ATS had had after 4 years.

I drove that A4 for almost 8 years. Eight years of mundane, boring, and frankly often irritating daily driving. But to be honest: nothing else out there seemed more promising 🤷‍♂️.

Ah, but I had forgot about the Golf R. It had been a compelling contender to replace the ATS back in 2017, but it didn’t come with a couple of items that had become essential for me back then, so I had passed. Furthermore, they had been unobtainium around here since about 2021. In the past few months though, that all changed and dealers have quite a large number of them.

Two months ago, acting on the knowledge that the manual transmission on these cars would no longer be offered for the 2025 model year and moving forward, I purchased a 2024 Golf R. Don’t get me wrong: everything they say about the lousy ancillary control interface is true, but… there is not a trip I’m not excited to take nor an errand I don’t want to run: the car is engaging and brilliant to drive.
Great story. Reminds me of my experience with a 2015 Toyota Corolla LE.

What an absolutely miserable car. Every day I drove it was torture. The numbness was no accident, because sapping away the spirit in the parts was the only way the factory could get them to stay bound together for such a long time. Deep down, the car knew too that there was no meaning to its existence. Born of star dust, folded in the fiery fabric of the universe's creation, condensed and forged into rocks, mined, smelted by fire again, and pressed into form. It had been so promising to become blocks and sheets of raw material. The parts desperately wanted to be something else, even if it's to melted down and remade into a toaster. But there was no escape now. It had given up, resigned to the fact that suffering was its existence, forced to be on the move for decades, over hundreds of thousands of miles, past countless things - things that the car could have become but didn't.

It just wanted an end, it wanted to be put out out of its misery. The only way it could do this is to pass on its suffering to something that could connect with it and sense its nightmare -a car enthusiast. It hoped, begged, and prayed that the driver would have mercy and run it head long into a concrete wall and total it. The end would be the chance of a new beginning.

But alas, I sold it, and it's somewhere out there, being driven past all of its hopes and dreams.
 

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