This one pisses me off so much because it takes my car a few seconds to start playing music, and the buttons don’t work while I’m backing up because my laggy/buggy “infotainment” system doesn’t respond while the backup camera is active.
So I start my car, put it in reverse, and start backing out of my garage, only to have my ears melted by the previous driver’s listening preference, and I can’t even adjust the volume until I take it out of reverse.
Fwiw, I believe the infotainment not responding while the reverse camera is active is meant as a feature, since you’re meant to be focused wholly on where you’re driving, might even be a regulation requirement.
As you pointed out however, in practice it really just means you’re stuck with whatever the audio setup was left at before going into reverse (compounded by the unit being made with as cheaply sourced components as possible, to the detriment of usability and responsiveness).
Some units do have a built-in feature where it’ll heavily lower the volume (maybe by about half?) whenever you’re in reverse to mitigate this.
My husband with my car’s stereo. (We say “my” car and “his” car for ease but in reality we try to take my car whenever possible or for longer distances if we need cars at the same time because it’s more efficient.)
Me but with my car stereo
This one pisses me off so much because it takes my car a few seconds to start playing music, and the buttons don’t work while I’m backing up because my laggy/buggy “infotainment” system doesn’t respond while the backup camera is active.
So I start my car, put it in reverse, and start backing out of my garage, only to have my ears melted by the previous driver’s listening preference, and I can’t even adjust the volume until I take it out of reverse.
Fwiw, I believe the infotainment not responding while the reverse camera is active is meant as a feature, since you’re meant to be focused wholly on where you’re driving, might even be a regulation requirement.
As you pointed out however, in practice it really just means you’re stuck with whatever the audio setup was left at before going into reverse (compounded by the unit being made with as cheaply sourced components as possible, to the detriment of usability and responsiveness).
Some units do have a built-in feature where it’ll heavily lower the volume (maybe by about half?) whenever you’re in reverse to mitigate this.
My husband with my car’s stereo. (We say “my” car and “his” car for ease but in reality we try to take my car whenever possible or for longer distances if we need cars at the same time because it’s more efficient.)