Toyota Cost Cutting, really grinding my gears.
#16
Lexus Fanatic
Thread Starter
So then why would you leave spacer in the door lock/unlock part and continue using the spacer in the ES350 which is shared with the Avalon?
#17
Lexus Fanatic
I agree. No offence to Marshall, (I consider him a friend of mine), but he has an ax to grind with Toyota. That being said, the new ES is light years better than the outgoing ES which was better than the 07 ES. The new Avalon, Camry are all better than their previous models. The new Camry hatch is excellent. Not sure about Rav4 and the LS500 took a bit of step back in the cost cutting department whereas the LX got better.
I haven't seen a Rav4 yet, but the previous Rav4 was terrible inside, I don't see how the new one cant be an improvement. As for the LS500, the only place where I see any cost cutting compared to mine is the power seat belt anchor. Everywhere else is a clear upgrade or maintenance in material quality from my LS460L.
I looked at all the competition at the car park, every car make has the divider. New TNGA Toyota, they do not. There is reason as to why the divider was there. Lexus has them.
Here are the window switches from an S550...no divider:
#18
Lexus Champion
Well, two things, Jill. First, I agree with you that Toyota/Lexus has been steadily cheapening their interiors, trim, and sheet metal for years...that is nothing new. (I myself have posted in Car Chat about it many times). Second, though, with or without a switch-spacer, one must still watch what switch he or she is actually pulling up with their finger.....it only takes a couple of seconds or so with your eye off the road, so it's not like texting or fumbling with a cell phone. Most switches in today's cars are lit at night, to help make it easier in the dark.
Speaking of cell phones, BTW, I got a new one today (first new one in a LONG time)....will do a thread in Clubhouse about it.
Speaking of cell phones, BTW, I got a new one today (first new one in a LONG time)....will do a thread in Clubhouse about it.
In this day and age, any power window button design that cannot be operated by feel is just an all-out failure. There's absolutely no excuse for any design that would require anyone to have to look to check which power window button they are touching.
#19
Lexus Champion
But I can turn the question back to the OP--if it's truly an issue of cost cutting, why leave THAT spacer?
#23
Lexus Champion
Sure, if the issue is widespread, and not user error. Do you feel if you drove that car as a DD, you'd get used to the buttons and make sure you were feeling the button so you pressed it more to the left side so as not to accidentally also press the passenger button?
My WAG is that it's not cost-cutting. If it was, I would think they would remove all dividers, not some dividers. But who knows, really?
My WAG is that it's not cost-cutting. If it was, I would think they would remove all dividers, not some dividers. But who knows, really?
#25
Lexus Fanatic
Thread Starter
I am assuming you would get used to it. However, it is impossible (you cannot in any way) open both windows accidentally with the spacer set up. Almost every car I checked out on the lot had the space. I am assuming you could get used to it, but there must of been a reason to continue using a spacer part for the ES vs the Avalon (and other Toyota's)...that would have to be cost cutting.
#27
Lexus Fanatic
Sorry--this is just flat-out wrong.
In this day and age, any power window button design that cannot be operated by feel is just an all-out failure. There's absolutely no excuse for any design that would require anyone to have to look to check which power window button they are touching.
In this day and age, any power window button design that cannot be operated by feel is just an all-out failure. There's absolutely no excuse for any design that would require anyone to have to look to check which power window button they are touching.
And I learned that, not only from driving experience, but in the cockpit as a pilot. Some older General-Aviation planes used to have the flap-position lever shaped like, and not very far from, the landing-gear lever. So, after touchdown on the runway, when you want to raise the flaps, to kill the residual lift on the wings and allow the plane to settle down on its wheels for braking-traction, some inadvertent or careless pilots accidentally raised the landing-gear instead (fortunately, I never did this, as I was always careful and used checklists). Needless to say, that kind of pilot-error could be VERY costly to the airplane, if not totalling it. Later planes took more care in designing safer, more foolproof controls.
#28
Lexus Champion
I am assuming you would get used to it. However, it is impossible (you cannot in any way) open both windows accidentally with the spacer set up. Almost every car I checked out on the lot had the space. I am assuming you could get used to it, but there must of been a reason to continue using a spacer part for the ES vs the Avalon (and other Toyota's)...that would have to be cost cutting.
Cost cutting or no, Toyota is definitely not going to do an across the board replacement of that part mid-model life. But it looks from this on-line pic of the new RAV4, that there's a similar setup no divider between driver/passenger side window buttons:
https://www.toyota.com/rav4/photo-gallery/interior/10
Which, of course, still doesn't answer the question of cost-cutting or design intent....
#29
Lexus Champion
I wasn't commenting necessarily on the need to verify what switch your fingers were grabbing...only on the common sense of doing so.
And I learned that, not only from driving experience, but in the cockpit as a pilot. Some older General-Aviation planes used to have the flap-position lever shaped like, and not very far from, the landing-gear lever. So, after touchdown on the runway, when you want to raise the flaps, to kill the residual lift on the wings and allow the plane to settle down on its wheels for braking-traction, some inadvertent or careless pilots accidentally raised the landing-gear instead (fortunately, I never did this, as I was always careful and used checklists). Needless to say, that kind of pilot-error could be VERY costly to the airplane, if not totalling it. Later planes took more care in designing safer, more foolproof controls.
And I learned that, not only from driving experience, but in the cockpit as a pilot. Some older General-Aviation planes used to have the flap-position lever shaped like, and not very far from, the landing-gear lever. So, after touchdown on the runway, when you want to raise the flaps, to kill the residual lift on the wings and allow the plane to settle down on its wheels for braking-traction, some inadvertent or careless pilots accidentally raised the landing-gear instead (fortunately, I never did this, as I was always careful and used checklists). Needless to say, that kind of pilot-error could be VERY costly to the airplane, if not totalling it. Later planes took more care in designing safer, more foolproof controls.
#30
Lexus Fanatic
Thread Starter
Cost cutting or no, Toyota is definitely not going to do an across the board replacement of that part mid-model life. But it looks from this on-line pic of the new RAV4, that there's a similar setup no divider between driver/passenger side window buttons:
https://www.toyota.com/rav4/photo-gallery/interior/10
Which, of course, still doesn't answer the question of cost-cutting or design intent....
https://www.toyota.com/rav4/photo-gallery/interior/10
Which, of course, still doesn't answer the question of cost-cutting or design intent....