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Steering Wheel Volume Control Has Problems of Its Own - 2016 Honda Civic Long-Term Road Test
Edmunds.com
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Steering Wheel Volume Control Has Problems of Its Own - 2016 Honda Civic Long-Term Road Test
Edmunds.com's long-term 2016 Honda Civic has a new take on steering wheel volume controls that brings a problem of its own.
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In terms of the Recall (now official), well, its going to happen. I'm surprised that Honda who is the "world’s largest engine manufacturer" has serious engine related problems and didn't catch it for 4 months of manufacturing. That being said, the reliability of the Civic is still VERY high with 7 straight years (before this year) of Consumer Reports' highest reliability rating, so its to be expected in a drastically new model. I would expect 2017s and especially 2018+ to be near bulletproof again.
It's not the object of my fantasies -- not after having sat in one!
I knew the steering wheel controls were HORRIBLE at first glance! They're arguably the worst steering wheel controls of any car ever made! Just look at the trio beneath the 4-way pad! They're tiny, loose, and identical. Really, Honda????
It's a part that wasn't installed in the 2.0L ONLY. At the Honda dealership where I work, the recall is being dealt with swiftly. Cars that were under the stop sale are back in inventory and customer cars are coming in for repair. Stuff happens in the first year. People are so quick to throw judgment without knowing the whole story.
Change some switchgear on the all-new Civic, screw it up.
Update the Pilot, screw up the heated wheel.
Attention to detail Boyz!!!
http://www.edmunds.com/toyota/camry/2012/long-term-road-test/2012-toyota-camry-definitely-broken-buttons.html
But that doesn't matter to me as much as the main touch-sensitive volume control on the stereo faceplate itself, my natural go-to volume adjustment spot. This one is horrible for a number of reasons that range from look-at-me distraction and response time to inconsistency and fingerprints. And it's horribleness is compounded by the presence of an inviting knob placed exactly beneath where you'd expect a volume to be--except that it's a temperature control knob.
Making it all worse is the knowledge that chunky and easy-to-use volume and tune knobs do exist on the base non-touchscreen 4-speaker audio system that has a 5-inch display-only screen. Get an LX and all of these issues go away. And Honda looks bad here because Toyota manages to pair their newest (emphasis on newest - older designs have been lackluster) Entune touchscreen with volume and tune knobs in a way that greatly simplifies workflow and maximizes eyes-on-the-road time.
Twitter: @Edmunds_Test