- Joined
- Sep 6, 2011
- Messages
- 6,477
- Location
- Philadelphia
- Tractor
- John Deere 3033R, 855 MFWD, 757 ZTrak; IH Cub Cadet 123
It's very hilly where I live, in fact the back of our house looks out onto the slopes of a ski resort. So that could be part of it.Now, those are 60 mph rural roads, and no major hills. I know when we go to north GA, those hills eat the gas.
I will also say that my wife and I get very different MPG's in the same vehicle. I remember one fun little Audi A3 2.0T we owned about 20 years ago, it was her daily driver for her long commute up and down the turnpike, over some big hills into the Lehigh Valley. Her trip computer would usually read about 29 mpg, but one afternoon of some spirited driving with me behind the wheel on local roads, it'd be down to 19 mpg.
I think you're the first person I've ever heard say that! I hate the things, but not out of principle, it's just due to the horrible implementation:I love push button 4WD. Opens up space on the floor for more leg room in my truck, too.
- Unpredictable operation. When working on a vehicle up on jack stands or a lift, a manual transfer case can be shifted into neutral, and you know it's in neutral. Every time I need to put one of these electronic transfer cases into neutral, I have to pull out the manual(s) or spend ten minutes between Google and fighting with the correct combination of key position and a pencil into a tiny reset style button on the switch cluster, to actually get the thing into Neutral. It's just a stupid unnecessary PITA.
- Tiny un-lit buttons. Every truck I have ever owned, you cannot see or find the correct button for the mode you want while driving in the dark. When I commuted, my winters consisted of driving to work in the dark before sunrise, and driving home in the dark after sunset. Other than the rare weekend trip, almost 100% of my winter driving has always been in the dark, as I suspect is the case for many people. So why not back-light those stupid buttons?!?
- Arrangement or order of buttons makes no sense, and labels are typically too small to read at a glance while driving. In my truck, the buttons are arranged 4-square, with no rhyme or reason which is 4-hi, 4-lo, 2-hi, etc.