Link below if you don't know what i'm talking about...http://www.autoblog.com/2008/10/06/ford-introduces-limiting-mykey-for-worried-parents/Discuss...
10/6/2008 12:47:57 PM
Worthless. Kids who really want to wild out in cars will find a way- and probably just ride with their friends, which is actually more dangerous. This is some shit made to appeal to parents who think they are going to get the most for their money when buying a car, but really how long will it be worth having? Smith buys a new Focus when his son is 17. Smith Jr. really only uses his dads car for what, a year or so before college or getting his own car? Ford would have been better off developing this into somethign that could be retrofitted to other cars.
10/6/2008 12:57:38 PM
not worthless at all. its a fucking brilliant idea if you ask me.Limiting the top speed to 80, and limiting the stereo? sounds glorious. I think you have a gross mis-conception of teenagers.1) Driving your own (or your parents) car trumps riding with friends (especially a new ford focus)2) Most teens do not buy their first car. Mommy and Daddy do. So this could easily be useful for 3-4 years (15-19) depending on what the kid does after high schoolhell it could be a huge incentive for college in and of itself, "go to college, get the car fully functional".
10/6/2008 1:11:13 PM
just dont have kids and you dont have to worry about any of this
10/6/2008 1:11:25 PM
great idea
10/6/2008 1:17:36 PM
great idea.
10/6/2008 1:19:15 PM
10/6/2008 1:40:39 PM
Well it's better that a consumer can do it than the government, I guess.
10/6/2008 3:10:55 PM
10/6/2008 3:57:56 PM
Parents will be asking for a repeated chime if 2 hands aren't on the wheel at all times.
10/6/2008 4:23:37 PM
Screw 80, top speed should be 55. Should also have an accelerometer that triggers a misfire if aggressive acceleration or braking is detected. Force the little bastards to drive like the elderly.[Edited on October 6, 2008 at 5:23 PM. Reason : or how about a 3000 rpm rev limiter]
10/6/2008 5:11:19 PM
^I dont know about going that far. Allowing enough speed to safely maneuver out of bad situations is much safer than limiting to 55mph. And limiting acceleration while not braking gives the wrong message that gas is bad, brakes are good, which is not proper instruction.The real reason I like this, is for the potential that I, as another driver, could have a device in MY car that will LOWER THE FUCKING VOLUME on the douchebag kid next to me when I pull up next to them at a stoplight. No, I do not want to listen to your 40 subwoofers rattling your trunk like a sardine can.And yes I have subwoofers, and yes they are loud, but I turn my shit down in town and at stoplights.
10/6/2008 5:31:49 PM
10/6/2008 6:05:34 PM
^That I have to disagree. There are times when not being able to merge into tight traffic that's already going 65-75mph because your car just takes way too long to get up to speed is hazardous, especially on cloverleaf turnpikes where the merging lane for one on ramp is the same lane for those trying to get off (the us-1 I-440 exits are one that I can think off that are a bitch when you got someone in an old 80's civic that stops on the ramp because he knows he can't accelerate fast enough in that short distance to merge on, even though I guess they could just go around the cloverleaf ) Do they need to go 0-60 faster than 6 seconds? no. But 14 seconds is ridiculous. I'd say anywhere from 8-10 seconds is reasonable.Today's cars are faster and people drive them much faster. It's just one of those things where it's safer to keep up than to actually be slower...However, other than what I've said about the acceleration, I do agree that brakes are more important than speeding up. ESPECIALLY for young/inexperienced drivers, it's safer to slow your speed down to hopefully avoid an accident rather than speed up. Besides, I'm sure it's normal instinct that when shit's about to happen, more people will go for the brakes rather than the accelerator...[Edited on October 6, 2008 at 7:20 PM. Reason : .]
10/6/2008 7:15:55 PM
i have 105 hp and have never had a problem merging with traffic because i couldnt get to speed quickly enough
[Edited on October 6, 2008 at 7:29 PM. Reason :
10/6/2008 7:28:57 PM
10/6/2008 7:46:39 PM
haha people get so emotional when it comes to driving.
10/6/2008 8:07:08 PM
this is a good idea until some little emo suicidal jackass runs into you headon with his hair on fire on the limiter at 80 mph
10/6/2008 9:23:05 PM
10/6/2008 9:37:54 PM
10/6/2008 9:39:30 PM
this is retarded...If parents where just better parents then this wouldn't be an issue. This is just like the drinking age, as soon as the kid is allowed to use the car fully they are just going to take full advantage. Learning how to control yourself with a car is part of the learning process, besides we aren't talking about a mustang or a corvette, its a fucking focus...punish enough
10/7/2008 8:29:21 AM
Agreed.
10/7/2008 8:31:58 AM
i can think of a whole list of entertaining/dangerous things i can do with a top speed of 30mph and no radio. the point is if kids want to get crazy in the car, they're going to do it no matter what.
10/7/2008 2:46:15 PM
ding ding ding
10/7/2008 2:52:47 PM
yeah i agree... but i would like my car to have a vallet mode.. (if it was a fast car) so its not as enticing.....yes if one's intent is to be an idiot they can still do it... but a fuckus doesn't make we want to drive as retarded as an 03 cobra...
10/7/2008 3:00:22 PM
^ The vallet mode is a great idea...
10/7/2008 3:21:14 PM
When you put your kid on a bike with training wheels, do you just give them a push down the street and go back inside to watch TV? The safest thing is parental supervision, not a stupid speed and volume limiter in a car. This is why we have graduated license programs now instead of big brother programs on every vehicle driven by a teen, because they should be supervised till they are ready and then cut loose to fly or fry. I knew people killed in car wrecks soon after getting their license, they were on 2 lane roads going under 80, ran off the side, overcorrected and rolled. Which by the way is the leading type of fatal teenage car accident, and this new system wouldnt do a thing to address that. Not that it needs to be addressed, except maybe in the form of better drivers ed training.Modern cars are already speed limited at a safe level. Limiting them to 80 for drivers at a high likelihood for reckless behavior will create a new mark to measure performance by- how fast will it get to the limiter? Perhaps how long can I keep it on the limiter? How high can I jump this hill on the limiter? This will PROMOTE reckless driving in the kids who really are prone to it already. In the others, it will limit their safety on the highway. And to those who will say "when do you really need to go faster than 80?" please shut the fuck up. Think about that the next time you are on 40 at the Wade Ave split and that 18 wheeler switches whos blind spot you are in puts his blinker on and starts to switch lanes. Youll floor it and save your life while the poor kids who you Ford thinks they are saving via technology end up in a ball of flaming wreckage.What else will they come up with? Etch a sketch side glass for minivans? Anti-egging wax? Runflats on a Focus? Lets just go ahead and build the cars that drive themselves like on Demolition Man. And the boxes that fine us for swearing. Hand over your guns, turn in your keys, give us your souls America. Yay.
10/7/2008 3:51:39 PM
i don't doubt that it might save some lives, but it's hardly going to be any sort of real solution. i don't want the price of my cars being jacked up just because some parents would rather rely on technology to raise their kids. parents need to do the educating and imposing limits. the kids that don't follow good parenting certainly aren't going to be saved by a speed limiter and cutting the radio volume down. they're still going to not pay attention, drive recklessly, or whatever. this should eliminate some of the very extreme cases that make the 5:00 news, but that's a VERY small percentage. we've already got graduated licensing, grade requirements, etc... shit is going to far. what happens when the government catches wind of this grand new technology? will it still be such a good idea when it's federally mandated for all vehicles or all drivers age 16-18? if we're going to rely on other people to raise our kids, lets put this money and effort into better driver's ed programs. that's infinitely more useful than just imposing these other limitations.i don't know, i guess i just can't understand how a country that so courageously fought for it's independence, forged a frontier, etc. has turned into such a bunch of pansies that would rather regulate everything to death in the name of safety but at the cost of freedoms. some things in life are just dangerous. driving can be one of those things. raising kids is hard, but you have to let them go and do their thing at a few major points in life. they're going to screw up, sometimes in a major life taking way. what's next, we start engineering trees so 10 year olds quit falling out of them? sometimes i wonder how the human race has survived this long without all this nonsense.[Edited on October 7, 2008 at 4:13 PM. Reason : ^EXACTLY... should have just saved my time typing my post]
10/7/2008 4:11:09 PM
Here's my prediction:Most US car makers will start offering "economy" modes for their cars, adjusting the computer to reduce gas consumption and performance. (IE let it run lean, shift earlier, etc) You can bet they're looking for roundabout ways to get the EPA numbers up without actually spending any money on development.
10/7/2008 4:13:58 PM
yeah, right... i promise big oil will ever let that happen, at least to an extent where it would make any real difference. you do realize that the federal government, auto makers, and the oil companies are all in bed together, right? besides, you already have the ability to do anything that the manufacturer would do by simply adjusting your driving habits.
10/7/2008 4:20:53 PM
I'll rebutal to that for the sake of conversing (no hard feelings I hope... Kind of like being devil's advocate) So don't think I'm upset or yelling or anything
10/7/2008 4:31:02 PM
you sir, are a bona fide idiot.
10/7/2008 4:42:30 PM
Aww damnit. You gave up on me. I thought we could discuss this... haha. Either that means you don't know how to respond or you just ain't as witty as I thought... j/k holmes... [Edited on October 7, 2008 at 4:55 PM. Reason : ]
10/7/2008 4:53:51 PM
it's easy to play devil's advocate, but you haven't really provided any support for your argument. hell, half of what you posted was in agreement with our standpoint. instead of simply arguing for the sake of arguing, explain how this is going to drastically cut the statistics. give us some hard numbers of how many lives this is estimated to save, or by what percentage fatal accidents in the target group will be reduced. where's the data that says kids who drive below 80mph and only have the radio at half volume are never or rarely involved in fatal accidents? don't waste much time looking, because there is none. why should i as a consumer be forced to pay for this technology that doesn't benefit the majority and is STANDARD equipment? out of the very small number of kids this will be effective for, how many do you think will secretly bypass the system? i might could deal with or even support this if it was optional. come on, live in the real world for a minute. all of this sounds fantastic on the surface, but in reality it's nothing more than a feel good marketing campaign that will eventually turn into just another useless burden in a world of ever increasing rules and regulations.[Edited on October 7, 2008 at 4:58 PM. Reason : .]
10/7/2008 4:56:30 PM
touche! I need to do more research, but I'm sure the basic principle of what I said stands. yes, I do agree to some of the things you've said because I'm not that retarded to disagree just for the hell of disagreeing. I'm trying to keep it realisitic with those respects. I'll retort later. I just got more work stacked on my desk >_< and classes tonight on top of it.
10/7/2008 5:01:00 PM
10/7/2008 5:14:56 PM
^^yeah, i think we have common ground on the principle of it. it's just the actual implementation that i'm personally opposed to. in a perfect world where this would always work exactly as described and corporations/government wouldn't use it as a gateway to other things, i think such a thing would be great. we don't live in that world though. ^ah. agreed.
10/7/2008 5:21:10 PM
^ & ^^I agree. Thinking about it more, I think this idea parallels that of the on-board Breathalyzer. Is the my key a good idea? yea, I think it is. Do I honestly care if it makes it onto the market? No. Do I think it'll make that much of an impact? Probably not. Now time for class >_< I will say though that the breakdown on teenage fatalities from vehicular altercations are:~33%- Drinking and Driving~33%- Excessive speeding~33%- otherNow as far as excessive speeding, "My Key" won't help restrict anyone from doing 75mph in a 35mph zone...[Edited on October 7, 2008 at 6:09 PM. Reason : .]
10/7/2008 6:08:55 PM
i fail to see how offering an option to consumers is a bad idea just because a few of you do not think you would need it for your kids. this is exactly the opposite of government intervention, its letting parents and the free market decide. this is what we need more of, not less of. I have to believe that ford has a lot of market research behind an innovation like this, i would bet that a lot of parents would like something like this. and from a safety standpoint: sure this may not make a huge dent in a lot of statistics and may not be a huge jump in reducing teenage driver accidents, but how the hell would it hurt? any minimal gains are good. our cars are safe today because of the sum of many small innovations. don't want to pay for something like this? then don't, no one is forcing you to. a couple of you are asking one poster to defend why this is a good idea, but why the hell is this bad? some people don't like to pay the additional cost of airbags or seat belts, so is it bad that they offer them? I think I could probably be ok with only one mirror and not three, is offering three mirrors bad?
10/7/2008 6:42:39 PM
^you need to read. you obviously missed that this is not optional, it's standard equipment.
10/7/2008 6:49:52 PM
^^ it's great advertising for the brain numb of the world, just a gimmick though
10/7/2008 6:59:27 PM
^^i got from what I've read that it was standard and at no additional cost because the technology was already built into the car.
10/7/2008 8:16:17 PM
^Exactly. It's not going to cost you any more. And lets be REAL HONEST HERE. Neither BBR or optmusprimer would ever buy a NEW FORD FOCUS anyway.You guys are both making retarded strawman and anecdotal arguments.You are making the exact same metaphorical arguments as "I don't wear a seatbelt because this guy I know died in an accident because he was wearing one". It's also pretty blatantly obvious neither of you either have kids of driving age, or have any recollection of being that age (or maybe you were just weird at 16-18 years old).
10/7/2008 9:06:16 PM
their point isn't that it's going to affect them directly because it's in a ford focus, but because it will eventually spread to other makes/models and sooner or later most things could possibly have it by defaultbasically what he said here
10/7/2008 9:18:33 PM
maybe you dont realize that almost every ford vehicle has had the chime for the last ten years or so.or that EVERY production car in the US has had speed governors for over a decade.or that many many makes of cars have had auto-matic volume controls on stereos for years. This is simply the same technologies put into a user-customizable form. There's nothing nefarious about it other than it being a good advertising opportunity and saving some lives. How is it bad to have these technologies in all cars where the DRIVER gets to make the choice of using it or not?Don't forget all of these features can be altered or TURNED OFF. Which is more control than most vehicles give you today.
10/7/2008 9:32:56 PM
10/7/2008 11:12:59 PM
you don't think seat belts should be required by law?
10/7/2008 11:20:20 PM
All I got to say about the seatbelt thing is:If you die in an accident where a seat belt could have saved your life, I say they burn your body and the car altogether on the spot. No one should have to clean your shit up after because you failed to take all possible options ensuring your safety. I sure as hell would leave that person's body to rot. [Edited on October 7, 2008 at 11:58 PM. Reason : .]
10/7/2008 11:58:10 PM
^^no. i don't think it's very smart to not wear one, but i believe things like that should ultimately be a personal decision. at the most, the government should educate the public on the risk and danger of not wearing one. ^wat? in that case, lets stop providing any medical services to people that speed also. or people that accidently run a red light and hit someone. or people that do anything that could possibly injure themselves. hell, lets just all build padded rooms in our houses and never leave!
10/8/2008 1:09:22 AM
10/8/2008 3:30:26 AM