Deborah Wahl hired as Cadillac's Chief Marketing Officer
#16
Lexus Fanatic
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I'll keep an open mind on future versions of the CUE. I don't plan to sample any more Cadillacs between now and the XT4 debut later this year, but I'll try it then. We'll see.
#17
........... but what irks me about the E-Shifters is that the manufacturers could design them to work like a traditional PRNDL lever, and yet don't. Confusing patterns are why the Government stepped in, back during the mid-60s, and made the PRNDL sequence mandatory. That (may) have to happen again.
#18
Lexus Fanatic
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OK....what I meant was moving the shift-lever one notch back and forth through each PRNDL gear position and having it remain there (like traditional floor-levers)...not a spring-loaded action which snaps the lever back to its central position no matter what gear you are in, and then having to jog it up and over, in an L-shaped pattern, for reverse. The manufacturers, IMO, could easily design an E-shift lever like that, without the mechanical linkage. I myself got used to it after about two weeks, but people driving or renting the car for only a couple of days won't have that luxury.
Is it a little clearer now?
I DO, however, like one feature of E-shift levers...at least the newer ones. That's the shifter automatically putting the car in PARK if you are too absent-headed to remember it. A well-known actor was killed a few years ago when the ZF transmission and E-Shifter on his Jeep Grand Cherokee stayed in Neutral, and he started walking away, thinking it was in Park. The Jeep rolled forward and killed him. Since then, a couple of safety-overrides between the doors/ignition/shifter have been added to newer E-shift levers (including the ones at GM) preventing that.
(It also makes you wonder why he didn't use the emergency brake)
Last edited by mmarshall; 03-12-18 at 04:03 PM.
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