#ShiftByWire
Blame Technology: Awful Shifters Will Continue Until They're Made Great Again
Center-mounted in a vertical fashion, the shifter in the fifth-generation 2018 Honda Odyssey profiled yesterday by Chris Tonn requires drivers to push a rectangular button for park, pull back an indented button for reverse, push another rectangular button for neutral, or depress a square button for drive.
In the new, second-generation 2017 GMC Terrain, a low-slung horizon of shift buttons mandates pushes of a rectangle for park and a small square for neutral plus a slight pull for reverse or, farther to the right, drive.
Perhaps you’re familiar with the lengthy push-button shift mechanism in newer Lincolns, where buttons for ignition, park, reverse, neutral, drive, and sport are laid out vertically on the driver’s side of the centre stack.
Some automakers are trying out rotary knobs, or shifters with separate park buttons, or monostable shifters that have earned a bad name.
They’re here to stay. Blame technology. Hope for reliability. Don’t expect standardization.
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