Engineering Explained: 5 Modern Car Options We Can't Live Without

There are plenty of options boxes which aren't worth ticking, but these five have stood out to me over the years!
Engineering Explained: 5 Modern Car Options We Can't Live Without

In the past 10 years, cars have undoubtedly inflated in weight, price and features as competition and safety regulations force innovation within the industry. It’s also worth mentioning that many of these features are frustratingly terrible and aren’t worth even considering. Throughout the hundred or so cars I’ve tested in the past couple years, these are the five features which have stood out to me as the most enjoyable:

  1. Downshift Rev-matching
    
2. Heated Everything
  2. Adaptive Cruise Control
  3. Smart Door Entry With Push Button Start
  4. Apple CarPlay/Android Auto
Remote video URL

Car lovers have a common problem where we’re not willing to admit that we’re not actually race car drivers. Most of us have day jobs, and cars are our toys to play with after a nine-to-five. Because of this, many aren’t willing to admit that features like automated downshift rev-matching are actually amazing driving aids. Sure, I get it, it’s not the purist’s way of downshifting while braking hard into a corner, but it’s a feature that can enhance your driving (and save your clutch) while still allowing for the joy of a manual transmission. I’ve never driven any manual transmission where there wasn’t the ability to disable this feature, either. Pull out your ego, turn on downshift rev matching, and amaze yourself at how fun driving can be with such a simple yet brilliant tech feature.

2. Heated Everything

Engineering Explained: 5 Modern Car Options We Can't Live Without

I’m not just talking seats here. Technology has moved on. Now we have the ability to warm our hands while we drive, as well as the outside mirrors. If your arms are six feet long and no wider than a Honda Civic’s exhaust, you’ll know that blood flow at your hands has already been chilled to room temperature. Heated steering wheels are a ridiculous first world luxury, but after driving with this feature on a cold winter morning, you’ll be surprised how much it will influence a future buying decision. Heating the outside mirrors is great as well since you can remain in your car, hands on the toasty wheel, while your mirrors do the ice melting for you.

Remote video URL

Cruise control is an amazing feature for long road trips, but it becomes worthless in city-based highways where drivers endlessly change their mind about what speed is appropriate while a seemingly meaningless sign keeps reminding them. That’s where adaptive cruise control comes in. Rather than frustrating yourself with a driver ahead who can’t decide if they want to go 10 over or five under, the car lets you relax while the onboard computers attempt to understand the logic of the vehicle in front. While I certainly don’t condone distracted driving, it also helps you eat that burrito without putting quite as much mental effort into maintaining a safe following distance. Though neither of my personal rides have this feature, I’m always thrilled when a press car comes in with it.

4. Smart Door Entry With Push Button Start

Engineering Explained: 5 Modern Car Options We Can't Live Without

If you’re as lazy as I am, you’ll love this tech. With everything in my life, I aim to reduce the amount of time it takes for trivial tasks. That’s why I don’t own a dresser with drawers for my clothes - instead I store it all on a bookshelf where everything is visible and easy to access. I’ve removed the cabinet doors in my kitchen so I don’t need to open them to grab a pot. Yes, it’s unsightly, but if you’re going to judge me based on the appearance of my kitchen, we probably wouldn’t get along anyways.

This is why smart door entry with push button start is amazing. You put the key in your pocket, and then you forget about it. You walk up to your car, and it unlocks as you grab the handle. After getting in, you press a button and off you go. There’s no hassle of using a key to open the door, no reason to touch it in the first place. Volvo’s even talking of replacing the key with an app on your phone. I’m all for it! Is it ridiculous to value saving at most a few seconds? Probably. Does the thought of “another feature to fail” linger in my head just to save the amount of time it takes to change an F1 tyre? Not at all.

5. Apple CarPlay/Android Auto

Engineering Explained: 5 Modern Car Options We Can't Live Without

If you ever read that a car has an amazing infotainment or navigation system, nine times out of 10 you’re being lied to. I haven’t driven a single car where I thought “wow, this is just as easy as my phone!” And though I certainly haven’t driven every vehicle, I’m convinced that they’re all awful. The car world needs Apple CarPlay/Android Auto because car makers don’t know how to make a simple and intuitive touch screen, unlike the phone world where that’s literally their job. While a host of reasons prevent all the car manufacturers from adopting these systems (including legal contracts and business relationships with worthless infotainment companies), if you get a car with the feature you’ll be glad you did. Google Maps is reason alone for Android users. Now if they could just get the system to work over Bluetooth…

Click Here For More From Engineering Explained

Sponsored Posts

Comments

Ravian GTi-R

You guys are all saying you can live without them, but what if your opinion changed when you didn’t have to live without them. If you had a car with a heated steering wheel would you purposely turn it off? I know I wouldn’t. Even though I’m used to driving without it.

03/10/2016 - 14:13 |
0 | 0

I’d turn it off, if I knew it was on. Otherwise I’d end up with sweaty hands, possibly slipping off the wheel and into a tree.

03/11/2016 - 15:59 |
0 | 0
SpoolingTurbo

I like modern tech but i still prefer older cars, it is louder, things rattling, it actually feels like you are driving a car, new cars feel like you are flying with a stupidly quiet spaceship

03/10/2016 - 14:22 |
0 | 0
SimpleG

We can

03/10/2016 - 14:23 |
0 | 0
Josh Pizzy

Adaptive cruise control? Lol forget that I have wind up windows.

2000 S2 Peugeot 106 lyf.

03/10/2016 - 14:26 |
0 | 0
FlemishCarNoob

Sure, keyless go is great.
A friend of mine lost his keys in his car (they fell out of his pocket, under the seat and into the AC vent. His car wouldn’t lock (because there was a key in it). So they had 2 options: Stripping the interior to get the key, or remotely blocking the key and getting another one. So they got another €800 key and now he drives around with a key occasionally rattling in his car.

03/10/2016 - 14:32 |
0 | 0
Blvk_Sky

I don’t use basically any of those.

03/10/2016 - 14:35 |
0 | 0
Kilgore Trout

I disagree. I’ve never owned a car with any of those things and I’m getting by just fine. I love my ‘86 Cutlass and the only creature comforts it has are power windows and locks, power brakes, power steering, and a crappy aftermarket stereo installed by the previous owner (that I plan on replacing). This is how I manage without the aforementioned luxuries.

  • Torque Converter
    If you’re not the type to want to mess with rev-matching your shifts, just drive an automatic. Most modern automatics shift quicker and more accurately than you can, anyway — even with a fancy automatic rev-matching system. The only reason to buy a manual these days (at least in a modern car — classics are different) is because you prefer the feel of it.

  • Heated everything
    Gloves are cheaper and continue keeping your hands warm even after you exit the car. Heated steering wheels don’t do that.

  • Taxi
    Driving in traffic is annoying, sure, but if you really don’t want to deal with it, why not just save yourself the effort of steering, too, and just take a cab? Probably cheaper than adaptive cruise control, anyway.

  • Car keys
    EE already admitted the time savings are barely noticeable. Not only is a fancy, wireless unlocking/starting system just one more thing to fail (plus I really hate push-button start for a number of reasons, but what about making sure your car is locked? Every petrolhead, I think, does the “give the handle a tug, just to make sure it’s locked” thing. Well, if the car unlocks when you’re nearby, you’ll never really know it’s locked — you’ll just have to trust your car. And if, say, your power lock motor goes bad, you would never know that you just left your car unattended, unlocked in a part of town where that is really not advisable. As far as using your smart phone as a key, this would actually prevent me from buying a car because I do not use a smart phone. I’m still discovering unused features on my flip phone after two years — smart phones, to me, are just overwhelmingly complicated, overwhelmingly expensive distractions that I have no interest in.

  • Atlas and an aux jack
    Of all the things on this list, the one with the fancy smart phone thingies is the only one I could maybe agree with. Even though it doesn’t apply to me because of my lack of smart phone or interest in them, a more universal way to interface with those devices in our increasingly interconnected society just makes sense. To someone who’s interested in all that stuff, it’s really a no-brainer. But I get by just fine with a road atlas and an aux jack. Besides, other peoples GPS systems have gotten me lost, while a good old atlas is far more straight-forward to me, has never gotten me lost, and has even successfully gotten me un-lost after following a friend’s GPS tried to feed us some nonsense that got us utterly lost. Plus, with a hard copy, you never have to worry about losing data you depend on when you drive into a dead zone.

03/10/2016 - 14:36 |
1 | 2
Jay-Desu

Only luxury that I want it’s the regular cruise control for trips but that’s it, I’ll pass for all the other fancy stuff I like to be the one driving not my car…

03/10/2016 - 14:53 |
0 | 0
Anonymous

OCD INTENSIFIES
1.
2.
2.
3.
4.

03/10/2016 - 14:58 |
0 | 0
Anonymous

In reply to by Anonymous (not verified)

Also, unlocking your car via an App from your phone seems like a very useful feature for hackers

03/10/2016 - 15:08 |
1 | 0
Anonymous

Meanwhile in Indonesia

03/10/2016 - 15:15 |
0 | 0