There’s an astounding amount of market research and social and economic science dedicated to determining exactly what features people really want from their cars. This is, of course, big business for carmakers, who use this data to carefully appoint their cars in such a way as to maximize the amount of money they can extract from consumers. It’s a noble pursuit, of course, though what is often underappreciated is the counter to these sorts of studies: research into what car buyers want the least. I’m excited to say that I have been given the results of the most comprehensive and exhaustive and exhausting study on what car buyers absolutely do not want, a solid two weeks before the official announcement at the National Bureau of Economic Research’s Economics of Transportation Conference.
This study, which was conducted primarily within a 22-inch diameter sphere of space surrounding my head, reveals some fascinating insights into the state of the modern automotive consumer, revealing their wants, needs, desires, fetishes, and more, all through the negation of these qualities. The study emphasized seven potential car features or options that generated the most distaste, revulsion, and dismay among consumers, and I feel these are important enough to present to you.
So, according to the study, which is currently in the final stages of peer review (by a board composed of academics, 8-bit computers, and three especially erudite raccoons, including one that is a member of the Knights of Columbus), here are the six least-desired car features:
1. 90:10 Split folding rear seats


2. Speedometer calibrated in leagues per day

3. Eyewash system instead of windshield washer

4. App-controlled headrests, with subscription

5. Glovebox incinerator

Gloveboxes with the ability to rapidly incinerate their contents proved to be wildly unwanted by car buyers, and even more so when activated by a stalk in the place of the expected turn indicator stalk.
6. Anti-lock seat adjusters

7. Bifocal windshield

The concept of a prescription windshield has been bandied about for years, primarily by representatives of the American Ophthalmic Consortium, and while those have never been popular, the idea of bifocal windshields, where the areas that are likely to have signs that need to be legible and areas for seeing distance have different lenses, is even more unpopular. Bifocal windshields have an effective 100% ability to make drivers vomit within moments of driving.
Fascinating, right? I have no idea why this study has taken so long to be undertaken, but I’m happy it’s finally here. It’s super helpful for not spec’ing a new car you won’t buy!






90:10 Split folding rear seats used to be a thing. The 10% was in the center and called the “armrest”
I can’t believe no one’s noticed the Tommy Tutone Easter Egg in the speedometer’s odometer!
Jason, I want to flag your posts as AI: Always Inspiring! More human slop please!
Also many Chinese cars come standard with headrest speakers, and massaging headrests could be just a few years away. Point 4 is much closer to real life than you might think……….
Glovebox incinerator??
Usually, when something like that happens, it means that somebody’s heater core just took a dump! LMAO
Floor mounted horn button next to the brake. “I thought I went for the brake!” This would explain honking when braking might be more appropriate.
We had a truck on our farm like that, also a couple trucks with the starter button down there and several with the headlight dimmers down there. Not really any way of telling ahead of time what that button was going to do.
Or how about the integrated brake and horn button? Press lightly and it’s just brakes.
Slam on the brakes though and the horn honks automatically at the same time.
I bet VW wishes they had looked at the 90:10 seat for the third row of the ID.Buzz.
Wait, what? Desmodromic ashtray or limited slip cam belt are not on the list? Split folding clutch pedal? There is so much bad science these days. Or is it political, Tesla cost-cutting the FRONT touchscreen in the standard models is not even worth a mention anymore?
I always enjoy the split brake pedal for the left and right side brakes on our tractors. It would be a real hoot in a car.
Manual torque vectoring! Or the bootleggers turn, achieved by cutting the right side parking brake cable and bolting to the frame.
Had a couple of farm trucks with parking brakes like that — poor man’s Detroit locker. Usually the left side was up on the crown of the road and the right side would be in the mud.
Surprised heated seat that work by passing current through the driver’s body didn’t make the list.
I have had heated seats for decades. They work by passing gas from eating indigenous South West food the night before. And I have found adding jalapenos also heats up the torso from heartburn. Try them hacks tick tock.
What are you saying!! I want all of these options! If a car maker spent hundreds of millions of dollars to put all of these in a car, and it was a wagon with a stick. I would totally buy one. Used. If I got a good deal on it. A really good deal.
Car manufacturers don’t really design for the used car buyer.
Sounds like you’re in the market for a wagon with a shtick.
“Almost nobody wants a speedometer calibrated in leagues per day. Despite the popularity of the unit of measurement (which is about 3 miles) in the Age of Sail (1500s to 1800s)”
Well now I have some questions for you Mr. Jules Verne. 20,000 leagues is 60,000 miles! That’s well over twice around the Earth’s equator!
It’s not a small book.
Maybe 0.4 x 0.3 x .05 cubits or so.
How many pairs of animals can you cram into it?
All of them. No further questions at this time.
Depends if you fillet and skin them first. They are quite compact that way
Isn’t that 90/10 folding seat just a passthrough?
The guitar neck gate.
6. Anti-locking Seat Adjusters
Yeah, one would think that wouldn’t be such a great feature after reading All Creatures Great and Small, a semi-autobiographical book about a veterinarian in rural England in the early 1940s, where James Herriot recounts the account of being picked up at the train station by his new veterinary practice partner in an Austin Seven where the passenger seat had inexplicably been replaced with a household chair, specifically a rocking chair complete with the runners, that was not bolted down. Needless to say, Herriot’s inaugural ride to his new practice was memorable.
The PBS/BBC series ACGandS often has excellent footage of pristine vintage autos just tooling about the countryside, it’s glorious. They are well written, and I’ve watched years worth, but now sometimes just view with mute while reading something, occasionally grabbing my attention with something wonderful.
There were a TV movie (1975) and two series (1978-1990 and 2020-2025), hadn’t known about them being such meccas for car spotters! (Only ever seen the TV movie myself as it came out when I was a very young child, gonna have to check out the others)
https://imcdb.org/movies.php?title=All+Creatures+Great+and+Small
That does remind me the old Herbie movies as delightfully (or terribly – depending on your opinion) campy as they are, are Full of beautiful vintage 1950s and 1960s sports cars. Worth finding and watching on mute
Ré No. 2: Of course no one wants a speedometer calibrated in leagues per day. The proper measurement is furlongs per fortnight!
This is distressingly close to the thought I had
I prefer parcecs per epoch.
How about the old hop, skip, and a jump per hour?
Angstroms per Scaramucci.
I prefer ‘Smiles per Lachter‘
Otto, please check on your dad, make sure he’s drinking enough fluids.
His fluids are fine. Flaming used brake fluid cocktails with coolant chasers are a morning ritual in the Torchinsky home.
The switch to OATmilk for green russians really smoothes things out, too.
A DOT4 brake fluid martini is the ideal drink for Torch.
Now if it’s a dirty martini, that’s where you have problems.
I haven’t met Torch in person but I’m under the distinct impression a Torch martini is 40+ yo communist brake fluid suckled straight out of a Yugo caliper bleed nipple.
That’s as dirty as it gets.
Think we need to switch up to 15w30 for the increased wear protection. And some Seafoam for good measure 🙂
Aren’t 90:10 split seats just one of those center pass throughs for skis?
Those are more like a 47.5 : 5 : 47.5.
A buddy of mine had a Blazer with anti-lock seats.
It was both annoying and terrifying based on weather the driver or the passenger seat decided to move.
My friend’s ’87 S10 Blazer also had that feature on the passenger seat. Frustrating was an understatement, so we jammed a piece of wood between the seat rail and the firewall.
A bifocal windshield sounds like a great idea, actually.
Came here to say this!
Right?
I bet the resale value on those would suck. I’ll stick with my cheaters from the $1.50 cent store
You can only sell to someone with the same RX as you. I hadn’t thought of that.
Visits to the eye doctor are worse now. Besides getting an updated prescription for my progressive glasses, I now have to get an updated prescription windshield. Bonus, tho, is that my wife never borrows my car. I can’t drive her car, either.
Maybe I’ll go back to regular windshields. My current progressive prescription windshield is a transition windshield, and I don’t think it’ll pass inspection.
I wish I could get used to progressives 🙁
Did you spring for the anti scratch coating?
Anti-scratch, anti-glare, all the coatings. That’s why my windshield costs more than the car’s worth.
… until your prescription changes…
90:10 split seats are handy If you ever meet a stranger in the alps but you have a full car so they can sit in the trunk and still be part of the conversation.
I peed a little bit.
Thanks.
#1 is desirable when you have a frequent need to transport 2 passengers and approximately 8 hockey sticks.
I could see a 90:10 seat in a French car for carrying a baguette or skiis for the Alps. Or some other very French reason
Promotional merchandise for the cigarette convention?
Or in the US for transport of the big hoagie?
Anything that Paul thinks is a good car idea. Paul wants to marry his mother in law!
https://youtu.be/8YDpvMYk5jA
Smelly!
I dunno Torch, I feel like that one chemist who got acid in their eyes would really appreciate an eyewash station in the car when they’re driving themselves to the hospital because ambulances in the US cost too much money.
It’s a paid subscription so you’re not saving much.
Not when you are make chemist money.
I’m just wondering, what else might be lurking in the 22-inch diameter sphere of space surrounding your head?
I suspect Mary Jane smoke.
All things great and terrible.
To be fair, the 90/10 seats would work well for the inverse of carrying, say, a long pole or a folding table on its side, while still fitting 2-3 passengers.
Please leave tall Polish people out of this…