• stoy@lemmy.zip
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        6 days ago

        The best looking dials on a dashboard I have ever seen is the dashboard from the Saab 9000 CSE.

        This isn’t exacty what I remember, but close enough:

        I love the green and orange colors, the car diagram, the turbo, temp and fuel dials are just great.

        Granted I was a kid when we had that car, but the colors were beautiful

        • vaultdweller013@sh.itjust.works
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          6 days ago

          I have two thoughts.

          Damn thats beautiful and Saab as in the guys who made jets for various European nations during the cold war? Is this a Toyota situation where they make cars as well as military equiptment.

          • stoy@lemmy.zip
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            6 days ago

            SAAB Automobile is the company that built the cars, their parent company was SAAB AB the aerospace and defence company that is still going these days.

            SAAB Automobile was sold to GM back in 1989, and the SAAB 9000 series was produced under GM leadership

      • Laurel Raven@lemmy.zip
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        5 days ago

        I so very much preferred speedometers like that which had every 10 marked rather than every 20 like so many seem to do

      • Buddahriffic@lemmy.world
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        7 days ago

        That looks just like my Sunfire’s dash, other than mph being more prominent than km/h and it redlining over 7k rpm.

        Is that an S2000?

        • ColeSloth@discuss.tchncs.de
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          6 days ago

          I had an s2000. My redline was about 9000 rpm and the gauge cluster was lit up orange, but lit up in such a way that it didn’t really look like it was back-lit. It was an amazing gauge cluster.

          • I think the Prelude’s cluster is great for a manual daily driver. And I think that for a track car, they nailed it with the S2k’s cluster.

            I had an auto Prelude as a kid. I traded it in 2015 for a CVT HR-V and regretted it ever since. I always told myself if I got another, I’d hold out for a manual. So getting to own another is really meaningful to me.

            I’d love to get to drive an AP1 at least once, though.

      • ColeSloth@discuss.tchncs.de
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        I had a 97 prelude sh 5 speed. Great Lil car and a lot of fun to drive. But then I got my hands on an 02 s2000. Funnest car to drive I’ve ever owned.

        • Hey, my '97 is also a Type SH. I’m the eighth owner according to the Carfax. Somehow, the interior is complete (sans radio), it has the original wheels, and was never resprayed. Except for the trunk lid when some dingbat removed the spoiler. The VIN sticker was painted over. But you can make out the numbers. All VINs match. Somehow, this car has driven 257,000 miles, and is still 99.9% complete.

          I’d love to drive an AP1 at least once, but I had a Prelude when I was a teenager so getting to own another (especially with a stick) is deeply meaningful to me. I was having my midlife crisis at 31, I guess lol

    • IndiBrony@lemmy.world
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      7 days ago

      There reason this one and the analogue dials spark joy is because there’s something tangible happening in front of us. Either needles are moving or lights are being lit.

      The modern iPad display just feels… disconnected, I guess

      • Laurel Raven@lemmy.zip
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        5 days ago

        Mine’s a fully digital one but they have animations on the sides that give that sort of feedback… Without it, though, yeah, I think it would make me feel more disconnected from driving, which isn’t exactly a good thing

      • Aqarius@lemmy.world
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        6 days ago

        Also, a digital display may be quicker to read a value, but an analog dial is infinitely superior for displaying both range and rate of change, which for rapid readouts is much more significant.

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    I love the potential of a digital dash.
    I hate the wasted potential of actual digital dashes.

    Let me fuckin customize it.
    Let me put whatever gauges I want wherever I want. I know that the data is available over the CAN bus, let me fuckin see it.
    Dynamically change the layout if something important happens I need to keep an eye on, but wouldn’t normally need to worry about

    • vithigar@lemmy.ca
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      Even more infuriating when not only is it not customisable, but they layout they do use is just… bad in a thousand different tiny ways.

      For example, the tachometer and speedometer on my vehicle have two display modes. The traditional looking dials and a more compact vertical wheel that leaves more room in the middle of the display for other things.

      …but those other things are almost always either useless (I don’t need to see a little picture of the vehicle I’m driving), or actively worse (the media info screen actually shows fewer characters in the larger mode).

      It’s not unusable, it’s just varying levels of awkward or useless in dozens of little aspects.

    • azertyfun@sh.itjust.works
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      4 days ago

      My Audi typically displays the outdoors temp on the digital dash, which is convenient. Except when there is any warning light on, which takes its place. Want to take a quick glance at the temp? Well right now it’s “low on windshield wiper fluid” degrees outside.

      Also why the fuck does this shitty dash scream at me about warnings when I get in the car but not out. By the time I get home I will have completely forgotten about the windshield wiper. How is “also display reminders after shutting the engine off” not the obvious implementation?

    • stoy@lemmy.zip
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      6 days ago

      My Seat Leon has a digital dashboard, by pressing the “VIEW” button on the steering wheel it rotates between several different layouts, which can be customized.

      I normally just have two normal dials, with a GPS map in the middle, fuel gauges to the left (because the standard place doesn’t line up properly) and a media display to the right (shows what song/podcast is playing and the progress of it)

      I can make my entire dash be a giant GPS map display, with only a small digital speedometer readout, but that is annoying.

      These new digital dashboards offer plenty of customizations, but the formfactor should be the same as a normal dash

      • PeriodicallyPedantic@lemmy.ca
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        Some can, especially aftermarket ones. But it’s usually not simple and usually OEM don’t offer a lot of customization options.

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    Touch screens have no business in dashboards. I don’t care how sleek it looks to replace all the physical buttons. You have to look at a touch screen to use it. That alone makes them entirely unfit for the purpose. Physical buttons that can be identified by touch and provide tactile feedback are the only interfaces that make any fucking sense at all.

    This fees like something so obvious that I cannot understand how we got here.

  • vegantomato@lemmy.world
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    5 days ago

    In my opinion, the worst part about new cars is that they are essentially tracking devices and some of them can be remotely controlled.

    Any suggestions on how to get a car that doesn’t track you and was built post-2010?

    • redwater@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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      Mazda MX5. I have a 2019 and it’s simple. Heated seats, blindspot mirrors, backup camera, led headlights. Absolute joy to drive.

      No other tech that tracks you as far as I’m aware.

      • Venator@lemmy.nz
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        4 days ago

        Why do you think it doesn’t track you? It has voice recognition in the infotainment, so it has microphones. I guess it probably won’t have mobile data connection since they require you to connect your phone or take it to a dealer for infotainment updates. So might be safe as long as you don’t allow it to use your phone data when its connected via Bluetooth or do over the air updates or take it to a dealer for repairs/updates.

        I’m not sure if car manufactures do it yet but samsung is known to require data dumps before providing spare parts for phones to 3rd party repair shops, so maybe car manufactures could do that as well?

      • vegantomato@lemmy.world
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        5 days ago

        Thanks for the suggestion, it looks promising. MX5 has only 2 seats, but maybe one of the larger models is good too.

    • Justagamer@lemmy.world
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      There is a website that you can opt out of having certain data tracked.

      But I imagine insurance companies will use it as an excuse to raise your rates if you opt out

      • vegantomato@lemmy.world
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        There is also the issue of companies pinky-promising that they won’t track you but still call home.

        But if no other alternatives are available, this is good to know.

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    7 days ago

    I am partial to the windshield projection style. It is truly fantastic for keeping your eyes on the road while seeing your speed

      • Laurel Raven@lemmy.zip
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        The Civic’s split dash was apparently generally hated, but I really liked it, for just that reason… The year after mine they switched it back to a single cluster, which I think is unfortunate

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        6 days ago

        Oh my SIL had one of those for a while, it looked pretty nice.

        Our Mazda projects the speed, cruise control status, and icons for vehicles next to us on the windshield. It really is very nice - one of the few things about that car that I actually like.

        • PraiseTheSoup@lemm.ee
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          What are the things that you don’t like? I’m in the market for a new (used) vehicle and Mazda seems to top a lot of charts for the past several years but I’ve never driven one.

          • limelight79@lemm.ee
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            It’s not a bad car for what it is, but I find it slow, uncomfortable, and annoying to drive. I don’t need a screeching alarm going off after it misinterprets a situation. The entertainment system has several bugs in it.

            It handles well, and it does get good fuel mileage.

            I wouldn’t have bought it in the first place, but my wife wanted something smaller than our Accord, and she basically only drives that vehicle.

    • fuzzyspudkiss
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      7 days ago

      I love my HUD, I’m currently driving a rental without one and I hate looking down at the speedo.

  • Nougat@fedia.io
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    I get having a digital cluster, because you can display way more information than using analog gauges.

    Put it in front of the driver.

    • snooggums@lemmy.world
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      Also, make the text bigger.

      So many displays have tiny, hard to read text that could easily be twice as tall and wide without even impacting the blank space that separates them.

      • limelight79@lemm.ee
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        6 days ago

        Heh, it’s not digital, but our pickup has small km/h speeds printed on the speedometer, like most cars. But when I was driving in Canada, I found they were nearly illegible (my eyes just weren’t good enough to read the small print). I had to switch to the digital speed display in the dash so I could read my speed in km/h.

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    Hard disagree. It is SO much faster for me to read a digital number readout than a analogue one.

    This isn’t touch screen controls (which are terrible). It’s a readout.

    • faythofdragons@slrpnk.net
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      I will never put a light mode display in my car. I will take an analogue dial over something that burns spots into my retinas when I’m trying to drive. Even with dark mode, the amount of ambient light coming off that thing is gonna bother me at night.

      We need to downgrade everybody’s headlights while we’re talking about personal preference too. If the car behind me has lights that are so bright they cast a shadow over my own headlights, they’re too bright.

    • Justagamer@lemmy.world
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      Yeah I thought since I’m old I’d be like gimme the old way, but I would actually prefer simplicity for regular commutes.

      But I feel like not even car companies want me to have simplicity so they can monetize more doodads

    • Shou@lemmy.world
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      5 days ago

      Depends on the screen. I like the dull matte screen on those citroën picassos.

    • ByteOnBikes@slrpnk.net
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      I was so happy when I saw some modern KIAs use analog controls.

      Then I checked KIAs reliability and safety score and died.

      • Trainguyrom@reddthat.com
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        I’ve put 80k miles on one Kia and just got a Hyundai with 100k miles on it. I’ve not once had something need replacement that wasn’t an expected wear item at about the expected interval. I also witnessed a Kia get pinned against the median on the beltline by a speeding car that lost control and while it was definitely totaled, the occupants were uninjured.

        So my annecdotal experience has been quite positive

  • _cryptagion@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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    6 days ago

    watching 80s and 90s anime has given me a soul-deep admiration for mechanical dials of any kind. I like high-tech shit, but it’s gotta have low-tech dials, or I’m out.

    • ByteOnBikes@slrpnk.net
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      Windows with a hand crank saved me when I was stuck in a car as a kid. Now you get out, you gotta smash it.

      • ArcaneSlime@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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        Well you didn’t ask me nor did you provide parameters other than age so here’s a list (mostly in the order I remember them, varying genres and ages, all pre-2010 many pre-2000):

        Cowboy Bebop
        Samurai Champloo
        Ruroni Kenshin
        Devilman (OG 1976, NOT reboot)
        Mazinger Z
        Galazy Express 999
        Golden Boy
        Trigun
        Cat Soup (movie)
        Berserk
        Big O
        Samurai Pizza Cats
        Bobobo-Bo Bo-Bobo
        Shin Chan
        FLCL
        Dragon Ball (OG, Z, ignore GT)
        Fist of the North Star
        Yu Yu Hakusho
        Inuyasha
        Golgo 13
        Ghost Stories
        Hare and Guu
        Lupin III
        Sailor Moon
        

        And I’m sure I’m forgetting some.

  • spaduf@slrpnk.net
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    6 days ago

    Honestly I’d kill for a digital dashboard that easy to read. Most are way worse.

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    7 days ago

    I guess I’m in the minority: I prefer to see my speed as a number instead of a dial.

    Yes, it does need to be in front of the driver.

    • stoy@lemmy.zip
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      An advantage of a proper dial is that you can instinctively see the change in speed by how quickly the needle moves.

      • sbv@sh.itjust.works
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        Different people have different considerations.

        When I’ve rented vehicles with a digital speedometer I haven’t felt like I’m missing anything without a dial. I haven’t found myself in situations where the movement of the needle helps me.

        When I get into rental cars with a dial, I feel like I need to watch it closely because I’m not familiar with where the ticks are. It doesn’t work for me at all.

        • stoy@lemmy.zip
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          I have absolutely felt like I am missing something when I don’t have a dial, I like having a tool get a general idea of how fast my speed it changing, rather than having to focus on a number to see how fast that is changing.

      • Aqarius@lemmy.world
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        6 days ago

        Also, range. You don’t even need numbers on the RPM dial to know it pointing past 12-o-clock is not good.

      • SeekPie@lemm.ee
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        6 days ago

        The Citroen C4 had a the speed right under the windshield which was a lot easier to read than a analog speed gauge in the dash.

        A picture:

        6740

        • stoy@lemmy.zip
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          I feel like this debate is about the concept of a seepometer as a simple number vs a speedometer as a dial.

          Your claim that this speedometer was a lot easier easier to read than a normal dashboard, leaves out a bit, that is dependent on what situation we are talking about. In normal driving, I find the dash perfectly easy to read, this concept you have shown be seem to be lacking color coding which would make warning lights less distinct.

          One of the best features in modern cars is when they have a HUD, that is fantastic.

    • ChouxFleur@lemmy.world
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      Renault have been doing this for ages. I had a 2009 Mégane which gave the speed as a digital number. Fuel and oil temps were bars to either side. Revs was a physical dial.

      It was such a great car, just a shame about the engineering…

      • sbv@sh.itjust.works
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        Before I bought a new car, I assumed digital speedometers would be available as a setting, not apparently not.

        It’s the kind of thing that I didn’t realize I wanted until I had to deal with the alternative.

    • itsonlygeorge@reddthat.com
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      Chevy 15-seaters from 2012+ you can turn the status screen on the dash and display numerical rpms. They are a bit slow to update but it’s kinda cool.

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    6 days ago

    My car doesn’t have any of that fancy crap, but the fuel gage is an lcd and I hate it so much. Like it should be fine, except it just doesn’t work at certain temperatures and I live in an area where that means half the year.

  • Donjuanme@lemmy.world
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    If dial gauges weren’t what you chuckleheads grew up with (I’m 38 so I understand the nostalgia) you’d realize they aren’t really all that well designed. There’s no reason they go as high as they do, especially when they were “capped” at 85, and they display a terrible amount of information for the amount of space they take up.

    I dislike many digital dashboards, not because they don’t interface well or they don’t look good, but because I can’t customize them to my own liking. I want my average speed, instantaneous speed, average miles per gallon, instantaneous miles per gallon, range, engine temperature, music track, outside temperature, inside temperature, tire pressure, time, vehicle orientation, all at once. They’re normally all available, but hidden in different menus and screens. Put it all out there, I’ll learn where to look for the info I want. And let people who desire less info have the ability to set up their dashboard for that as well.

    • Rhaedas@fedia.io
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      A dial gauge can impart certain information that other ways cannot. I can notice a sudden change in movement without looking directly down, or see certain patterns of movement that simple numbers won’t. An old example of the loss of that was found in some classic luxury cars (my grandmother had a Cadillac that I noticed it in). The speedometer wasn’t a dial, it was an analog bar that would go right to left as your speed increased. It was very hard to judge change of speed by this, much like it’s hard to see from a few digital numbers that rapidly change. I’ve also noticed that even digital dial gauges can suffer from this if their refresh isn’t fast enough to simulate an analog accurately.

      Doesn’t mean you can’t get used to a display or find other ways to get the same input, but dials aren’t just old nostalgia, they do have advantages. I would bet for some measurements an analog multimeter is preferred over a digital, and vise versa.

      • snooggums@lemmy.world
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        7 days ago

        Dials and digital displays are like clocks, the position can relay a lot of additional contextual information that doesn’t come from a simple number.

        • PeriodicallyPedantic@lemmy.ca
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          The thing about a digital display is that you can have things display however you want. You want numbers? Fine. You want gauges? No problem. You want sliding bars and thermometer looking things? You got it. You want a time chart of values over time? Can do. You want an of the above at once? Got it.

          In theory, anyways

            • PeriodicallyPedantic@lemmy.ca
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              Yeah, it’s mostly aftermarket ones, which is harder to do on modern cars ( I think? I haven’t actually seen anyone try to use aftermarket dash software on a built-in dash screen)

              • ChouxFleur@lemmy.world
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                I can’t imagine trying to flash software to my car; it would almost certainly be illegal in my jurisdiction (I can’t even retrofit LED lights on my Ford 🥲)

          • snooggums@lemmy.world
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            If they added the options to choose what to see it would be fantastic! Most don’t though.

            • PeriodicallyPedantic@lemmy.ca
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              Yeah, the potential of digital dashes is amazing, but the practical application of them , especially from OEMs, is pretty mid.
              Some aftermarket ones are pretty customizable though.

        • hydrospanner@lemmy.world
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          6 days ago

          Can you give examples?

          Both clock and auto?

          Because other than time, I’m having a hard time seeing what else a clock is telling you by being analogue.

          • snooggums@lemmy.world
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            You know how the shape or spacing of something can provide information?

            An analogue clock makes it easy to glance at and see the difference between two times. If it is at 10 you can instantly know if you have two hours until midnight (or noon) because there are two hour spaces. If it says 10 you have to mentally calculate the two hours. If you want to do something in 15 minutes it is a lot easier to glance ahead the distance on the clock than to calculate 15 minutes from now based on a digital display.

            The same thing is true for well designed analogue speedometers and tachometers. On my last car 75 mph was basically noon on the speedometer so I could see if I was going the right speed out of the corner of my eye because the line being vertical doesn’t require direct concentration. Same with the tach, I knew where 3500 rpm was to know when to shift when the music was too loud to hear the engine.

            Both require some familarity of course. I actually had a pain learning how to read an analogue clock until an uncle explained how he used the spacing and then it clicked. Speedometers vary from car to car, so it takes getting used to a new one.

            Both come down to how quickly we can recognize shapes and expected positions of things compared to reading numbers. My current vehicle has a digital speedometer and I hate it because I have to actively read it, can’t just glance at it like the old analogue displays.

      • SlopppyEngineer@lemmy.world
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        7 days ago

        Car manufacturers could’ve used the example of an aircraft. Their primary flight display shows speed nicely with current speed, good indication of changes in speed, settings like cruise control and max speed all in one clean display. I’d prefer that one. But no, it’s not even an option of course.

    • Randomguy@lemm.ee
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      If dial gauges weren’t what you chuckleheads grew up with (I’m 38 so I understand the nostalgia) you’d realize they aren’t really all that well designed.

      That’s not actually true, studies show that analog dials (or digital imitations) are better than regular numbers or bars as speed displays.

      The thing about analog dials is that they offer a lower mental load than a simple number. Seeing the dial move is a better indication of speed change than a number changing, and the “wasted” space in the dial offers a comparative idea of how fast you’re going.

      The human brain is just much better at perceiving relative changes than absolute ones. Seeing a 20 rise to 80 doesn’t convey as much info as seeing a dial in the bottom rise to the middle.

      I want my average speed, instantaneous speed, average miles per gallon, instantaneous miles per gallon, range, engine temperature, music track, outside temperature, inside temperature, tire pressure, time, vehicle orientation, all at once. They’re normally all available, but hidden in different menus and screens.

      The reason this information isn’t readily available is probably because putting more information only serves to increase the mental load on the driver which might cause distractions, and consequently, more accidents.

      • captainlezbian@lemmy.world
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        Yeah i have a background in human factors engineering and something like that is just asking for unsafe driving. If it can wait until you aren’t driving then all you should see of it is a little notification telling you fo check it when needed.