I’ve been increasingly dismayed by the direction automakers have been going with vehicle design. They keep packing anti-features into their lineups that are hard to avoid. Do you know of any modern cars that don’t have the following features?

  1. Internet connectivity. If the car is connected, it’s tracking me.

  2. Remote anti-theft. If someone else can disable my car, I don’t own it.

  3. Subscription features. I want to own my car.

  4. Touchscreens. They are a safety hazard.

There are some features I do want as well:

A: All wheel or 4wd. It snows where I live.

B: >= 30mpg or 250mi range if EV.


There is a discussion on Hacker News, but feel free to comment here as well.

    • db2@lemmy.world
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      5 months ago

      The drawback of older cars, wear aside, is they weren’t designed with things like crumple zones or airbags.

  • Zeth0s@lemmy.world
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    5 months ago

    Your requests are quite easy to satisfy. Just avoid fancy cars.

    Fiat Panda 4wd is a perfect example. Now, the question is, is it a car you’d like to drive?

    Anyway, full of European and Japanese cars that satisfy your requirements. Most cars cheaper than 25K euros in Europe actually satisfy those requirements

  • Railing5132@lemmy.world
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    5 months ago

    Not a helpful answer but I gotta rant since it just happened yesterday. The spouse was driving halfway across the state when all hell broke loose on their 2018 Honda crv. In the interest of time I won’t do the complete laundry list of error and warning messages, but it was just about every major system and safety feature, from tpms, brake failure, collision avoidance, cruise, lane departure, coolant temp, and something about the moonroof. There were a total of 14 warning messages and 6 dash icons. They called me in a bit of a panic, so I, thinking electrical issue, found a dealership near the route and gave directions.

    Four hours later, I got a call with an update: the “check engine” light was triggered by a detected misfire in one cylinder. “so what caused the cavalcade of calamity then?” I asked.

    “Oh, that is just what the car does when the check engine light comes on,” replied the service writer. “it does that to make sure you notice the check engine light.”

    You gotta be shitting me.

    We didn’t have the $1,500 for the fix for the fuel injector problem that caused the obd to trigger in the first place, so an oil change later, the codes were cleared and so were all the errors and warnings.

    What the fuck.