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Came across this while searching for cabin filter replacement. With a passion, I hate needing a screen to change things. I find it dangerous and adds to future maintenance cost. When the screen goes bad, you loose functions that are important. When an analog knob/button goes bad and all that needs to be fixed is that one button, if it isn't of great importance you can wait. But when the screen goes out you loose a lot of functionality, some important things like maybe heat, cooling, etc. We bought a 2021 because it has some buttons. My wife and I have agreed that we have reached the age and the point of not ever buying a car with everything controlled by the screen. There were cars we liked but they had no knobs, it was all screen. Years ago we bought a Subaru Outback CPO (5,000 miles on it). Bumper to bumper warranty paid for two screen replacements within the first 6 months of owning the car. We weren't charged but we saw the invoice and it was about $1800 each time. So yeah, screens go bad.People who think that having simple controls on infotainment screens is wrong should be held accountable—maybe even prosecuted (probably only kidding, but not really sure)!
This morning, I started my drive here in Georgia and realized my seat heater was set to level 3. While squinting against the morning sun, I tried to lower the heat—but the screen was slow. The fancy graphics looked cool but were annoyingly finicky. I spent a good five seconds fiddling with it, and in that moment, I accidentally hit the curb, destroying my fancy Continental CrossContact 245/45-20-99V tire.
To all car manufacturers catering to those of us who value simplicity: bring back the buttons!
Check the vin number, to make sure it's not part of the battery recall!Good morning. Happy Wednesday!
I am super-new here. Currently driving a 3yo Explorer w/ only 9k miles (picked it up as "brand new" in July 2024.
As much as I love the vehicle - I hate to say that there is an opportunity for me to downsize/upgrade to a 2023 Reserve III that is already depreciated to $37k (the original MSRP was $61k) It has 17k miles. It was a personal lease.
Question: what should I look carefully at? What should I check 2-3 times before signing the papers?
Pros of downsizing:
- I am single - I don't need 7 seats
- the Explorer is a pre-facelift w/ somewhat dated tech, while the Corsair is more modern, super-well appointed
- the Corsair is clean, serviced, probably well maintained
- is one model-year newer than my Explorer
- has better gas mileage / is more nimble
Cons:
- The Corsair ain't new. Who knows how it was driven?
- There is a noticeable steady vibration - hopefully it's just wheel/tire balance issue
- I noticed how small the trunk is (I use it a lot in my Explorer)
- The Explorer is much more versatile (although rather basic and lacking Lincoln's bells and whistles)
I would like to know what to be aware of before potential switch. Thank you and Corsair On!
All clear.Check the vin number, to make sure it's not part of the battery recall!
Drove from MO to NJ last weekend.
Gas mileage:
Conclusions:
- 31.3 MPG on premium
- 32.0 MPG on regular
(speeds ~5 MPH over the limit - anything from 30 to 75 mph)
- In my case, investing in premium gas is pointless.
- This car is amazing—I can't get enough of driving it!
Let me know if you want a more formal or more casual tone.
I understand. But I have no bandwidth for that. One test done. Excitement gone. Not trying again.One tank won't tell you much, especially on a freeway road trip, you need to run either regular or premium for a few tanks while the engine adjusts.