While my car's in the shop, I've got a rental (Mazda 3). The rental company calls it a "midsize". Seriously? It's smaller than mine, which is a borderline compact (it's a station wagon - the sedan version of the same model is classed as a subcompact due to the loss of interior space to the "notch"). Among the stupidity:
- Instead of a standard DIN radio, it's a fully-integrated unit. I guess people who buy Mazdas aren't supposed to upgrade their audio systems.
- Lousy sight lines. The bottom of the "greenhouse" slopes up toward the rear, making it hard to get a good view during shoulder checks.
- Plenty of chrome on the dash. Haven't the designers heard about something called "glare"?
- There's no temperature gauge. Instead, it has a pair of "idiot lights" - blue for "not yet up to the operating range" and red for "overheated". If you're in the normal range, you don't know WHERE in the range you are - drifting toward one end or the other is valuable information.
- The dash indicator for which gear it's in. For the "as needed" gears (people in the medical field will probably have a better idea of what I mean than others), there are separate outlines in white, lit in either green or amber (depending on which of the gears it is) when that gear is selected. For the forward gears, it has a 7-segment display that's been "massaged" to show a capital "D" instead of a zero (when the lever is pushed to the left, to allow driver-selected up/down shifts, this display shows which gear, from 1 to 5). What's the problem with this? The 7-segment display is RED (for consistency, it should be green, with white being a decent second choice). A car should NOT have a red light showing on the dash under normal operating conditions - for decades, a red light has been the standard for "something's wrong with your car!".
- Instead of a standard DIN radio, it's a fully-integrated unit. I guess people who buy Mazdas aren't supposed to upgrade their audio systems.
- Lousy sight lines. The bottom of the "greenhouse" slopes up toward the rear, making it hard to get a good view during shoulder checks.
- Plenty of chrome on the dash. Haven't the designers heard about something called "glare"?
- There's no temperature gauge. Instead, it has a pair of "idiot lights" - blue for "not yet up to the operating range" and red for "overheated". If you're in the normal range, you don't know WHERE in the range you are - drifting toward one end or the other is valuable information.
- The dash indicator for which gear it's in. For the "as needed" gears (people in the medical field will probably have a better idea of what I mean than others), there are separate outlines in white, lit in either green or amber (depending on which of the gears it is) when that gear is selected. For the forward gears, it has a 7-segment display that's been "massaged" to show a capital "D" instead of a zero (when the lever is pushed to the left, to allow driver-selected up/down shifts, this display shows which gear, from 1 to 5). What's the problem with this? The 7-segment display is RED (for consistency, it should be green, with white being a decent second choice). A car should NOT have a red light showing on the dash under normal operating conditions - for decades, a red light has been the standard for "something's wrong with your car!".
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