- Kia has developed a blissfully simple infotainment interface and central console for its vehicles.
- The setup favors buttons, knobs, and switches.
- I think it’s the best in the industry.
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As much as I admire Tesla’s Model 3 and its radical elimination of most buttons, knobs, switches, and gauges – placing them instead in a central touchscreen interface – I’ve also dealt with enough similar system to know that they’re a mixed bag.
A very mixed bag. In Chevys, Cadillacs, and Fords, the touchscreen-heavy controls work well. But in Lexuses, not so much. Mazda is behind the times. And in Jaguars, Land Rovers, and Range Rovers, while the system looks up-to-date, its performance has been woeful, improved only recently. Several automakers also use a combination of screen and touchpad interface, like a laptop. These are often quite tricky to use.
Luckily, I’ll always have Kia.
The automaker’s setup reminds me of the former standard-setter, Honda, whose vehicles for many years featured controls that were always where they should be and that were intuitive to use.
Let's take a closer look at the arrangement on a Kia Telluride that I test drove:
Behold! The 2020 Kia Telluride SX, a $47,310 (as-tested) three-row SUV that's among the best I've ever sampled.
Read the review.
The center console. TAKE NOTICE AUTOMAKERS! This is how is should be done.
The 10-inch touchscreen is the perfect size. It's also crisply responsive, with functions that are well-organized.
The renderings are quite sharp.
However, it's what we find below the touchscreen that truly makes the difference. Yes, other automakers mimic this set-up. But Kia's designers have thought everything through.
You might say this is old-school. But buttons and knobs never get old!
I've tested literally hundreds of vehicles and have evaluated every single center console in the industry.
Overwhelmingly, I prefer throwback arrangements of buttons, switches, and knobs. These are the safest and easiest to use, even if they offer "hard" redundancy to some of the virtual stuff that's accessible via the touchscreen.
What about steering-wheel controls? Well, I think they're OK, but they can be fiddly. And I usually end up favoring the console buttons and knobs.