rrizzi7210
Well-known member
- First Name
- Robert
- Joined
- Nov 18, 2020
- Threads
- 3
- Messages
- 120
- Reaction score
- 229
- Location
- Plantation FL, USA
- Vehicles
- 2022 MYP, 2024 CT CB (Foundation Series).
- Occupation
- Tech Business Owner
Well written. I would not be surprised if a future novelist used your content 200+ hundred years from now to bring the reader back to how things were before fully autonomous driving vehicles were the norm for the last 180 or so years.That effect in legacy autos is the torque converter that plays by its rules, not yours.
Yesterday morning I had to drive our F-150 from the street into our carport (about 30 seconds). It drove just like it did when new, which I now know is awful, frantic busy work that is overly demanding relative to the Cybertruck.
The V8 was at high idle because the engine was cold. So when I put it into gear with a huge clunky movement of an awkward lever on the steering column, it wanted to take off. I had to ride the brake to control my speed. I was trying to turn the wheel for a three-point turn but I had to keep turning it, it felt so nerfed, so ineffective. Finally I hit the steering stop and felt the steering pump stall out against the stops, so I had to back off a little bit. No big deal, I know how to drive legacy vehicles, it just surprised me. There was a quite a contrast between having to spin the wheel around real fast to get to the steering stop, which seemed to be in a nebulous location since I had spun the steering wheel around an indeterminate number of turns, and then suddenly having to be gentle with it against the steering stop. Then I had to move the big awkward shift lever again, it wasn't a small movement, and when I took my foot off the brake it accelerated in reverse requiring me to immediately put my foot back on the brake to slow it down as I spun the wheel back the other way as fast as I could. It felt like the truck was possessed because all my actions were in response to its actions, rather than what I wanted the truck to actually do. It felt like the truck was controlling me instead of the other way around. Then more of the same as I spun the wheel fast to the left and then spun it all the way back to the right into the carport and brought it to a stop. I actually breathed a sigh of relief as I put it into park and extract the key.
To think I used to think this kind of frantic spinning of the wheel was normal! The Cybertruck is so serene the way it does exactly what you tell it to without having spin the wheel like crazy or modify your actions to accommodate a machine that behaves as if it's possessed. A vehicle that is only responsive to the operators simple and direct commands frees the spirit.
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