I've had my new MG4 Xpower a few months now. It was an odd experience at first but have settled in and am happy with it overall, but have a few suggestions for improvement.
I will start with what I can argue are important safety features that really need to be addressed:
1. SAVE SETTINGS: not just a nuisance that it often doesn't save all setting, but actually dangerous because I expect things to be as they were and drive accordingly, such as unexpectedly being in NORMAL power mode instead of SPORT, and the handling is significantly different. Ditto, LKA with its jarring jerking.
Similarly it is a distraction to reset the settings while driving when it is noticed the settings have reset to defaults. This requires the driver to take eyes off the road, one hand off the steering wheel, scroll through a few menus, etc.
2. BIG BUTTONS: known flaws with on-screen 'software' / 'soft' buttons include:
- you must look at the screen as it may be in a different menu/screen, and the buttons are different
- you can't feel where a soft button is, whereas a hard button is always where it was so you get used to that, and you can feel when your finger is on it without taking your eyes off the road, or at least only for a very short glance
- when reaching over quite a way to press buttons on the far side of the screen, this is not at all good if something happens on the road that requires immediate action
- the soft buttons need to be much bigger to allow faster action with less time without eyes on the road, with larger fonts and ideally big distinct icons with maybe colours to also help quickly find and press them
- allow the screen to move and tilt to allow button pushing, and also to see the screen when light is shining at the wrong angle, especially when fingerprints have accumulated
- I'm in Australia so we drive on the left, so the screen is to my left, so I must use my left hand to push buttons, but this is awkward given I am right-handed
- I have never figured out how to get the spoken-commands feature to ever do anything useful... far from it. Unsure if it's my accent, but it's as distracting as having to go through screens pushing tiny buttons.
I'm not even sure what voice commands to use, such as whether I can just say like "turn up volume" and it will understand and equate it with similar meaning phrases like "increase volume", "turn up sound", "make sound louder", "stereo volume increase", and any combination and ordering of words. I've tried lots but no good.
Or must I say commands that are in effect just pushing buttons on the current screen page, so that I must look at the screen to know it is on the home page, then say "audio button", then see if it has accepted this and gone to the audio page to then say "sound up". This is very distracting and worse than pushing buttons.
- FASTER BRAIN: the info, settings, environment, entertainment system is quite slow, and as above, any time spent not looking at the road is dangerous. In this day and age I am surprised by how slow the processor appears to be, or probably non-ideal code.
- GLITCH FIX: if you open the driver's door under some circumstances, probably when in "D" but not entirely sure, but foot is on the brake, the car will glitch, requiring me to lift my bum off the seat (or get out entirely) to then turn the car off then on again otherwise it remains frozen. This has been both very embarrassing but also dangerous. Why open the door? To operate car door keypads, grab food from drive-thru windows, swipe cards, insert coins, etc.
Dangerous if you have to get out of the car while there's a bunch of aggressive hoons behind you looking for any excuse for a road rage attack. Depends what type of area you're in I guess.
- AUTOMATION: it is distracting to have to keep adjusting the windscreen wiper speed to match rain intensity AND car speed, or else suffer poor visibility. Needs automatic adjustment like most cars in that price range.
Ditto, sound system volume. Very simple to have it such that the volume goes up as the speed increases, and vice versa so the driver doesn't need to continually adjust it manually.
- AIRCON: I am a microbiologist presently working with mould (mold) and often see vehicles with harmful amounts of mould growth on the dashboard, windscreen and vents because it grows very fast on the wet chiller fins and coils when the car is turned off before the fins dry off. They warm up and this makes everything humid in the A/C system and nearby, including the whole car cabin interior if the windows are kept closed and the weather is warm and humid. People get quite sick from this, and it is expensive to remove it all as just spraying with something does nothing good.
Hence, a safety feature would be to have the fan continue to run for at least 5 minutes after the car has stopped and the A/C was in use, longer if cool humid weather. Ideally there'd be a moisture or humidity sensor in the A/C heat exchanger that detects when the fins are wet / dry and activates the blower accordingly
- HEAT KILLS: every summer many pets and children die when left in a car as the temperature increases amazingly. Yup, people should not do this, but all same they do. As a safety measure, have the fan turn on automatically above some temperature (and it is cooler outside), and perhaps run the A/C, and alert the driver via the app. Hell, crack the windows down a bit, or in an emergency situation allow the doors to unlock and windows roll down completely.
Also a comfort feature as anyone in Australia will tell you just how unpleasant getting into a hot car is, especially when it's maybe 65'C easily.
- DASHCAM: there are plenty of cameras all around the car, yet no apparent way to record them. Odd as I thought it would be simple to have an optional extra I'd pay good money for to just have an SSD connected to the cams that also includes location, time/date, speed, whether speeding up / braking, etc. This is very important information in the unfortunate event of a fatal collision, or more likely the dispute about who was at fault, or whether it was a fault with the car.
- CRASH DETECTION: turns out many drivers and passengers die because they had a collision, especially single-car accidents where they go off the road somewhere not visible to other traffic, because they are unconscious or otherwise incapacitated of calling for help. It's a thing. Some cars are being fitted with a black box that reacts to air-bag deployment, then asks the driver to indicate if they're OK. If no response in a minute after repeated alerts, it can send an emergency txt telling chosen phone contact and emergency services where the car is located and that there was a collision and the driver is not responding.
Yup. That's a few safety features and fixes I'd like to see.