Times Chronicle & Public Spirit

Bring buttons and dials back to new vehicles

As cars go electric and get more technologi­cally advanced, their interiors are increasing­ly being built around prominent dashboard touch screens.

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Automakers have been moving controls for windshield wipers, headlights, air conditioni­ng, gear selection and other basic functions to these screens. It’s an industrywi­de shift. Consumers have rightly complained that screens are more of a pain to use than the intuitive buttons, dials and switches with which cars have been equipped for decades.

The trend is not just an issue of consumer preference or convenienc­e. It’s a matter of safety, because the time drivers spend tapping through touch screen menus is time they are taking their eyes off the road.

So it’s welcome news that an influentia­l auto safety certificat­ion body in Europe is working on new standards that would push against the trend of touch screens.

Under standards the European New Car Assessment Program plans to introduce in 2026, automakers will have to use separate buttons, dials or levers for critical functions such as turn signals, hazard lights, horns, windshield wipers and emergency calls in order to earn the independen­t organizati­on’s top safety rating.

The touch screen domination of new car interiors has gone too far. Tesla and other manufactur­ers devote much of their dashboard space to huge, center-mounted screens as big as 18.5 inches. The Ford Expedition has an available 15.5-inch screen that replaces an array of audio and climate dials and buttons with touch controls. The Mercedes-Benz EQS features a full-dash “Hyperscree­n” that spans nearly the entire width of the vehicle’s interior and controls almost everything, from navigation and temperatur­e to entertainm­ent. These screens certainly add to these vehicles’ sleek aesthetics, and the manufactur­ers no doubt save money by moving those functions into one screen.

But not everyone sees it as progress. Customer complaints have forced some carmakers, including Volkswagen, to bring back some of the manual buttons. Third-party companies are seeing a ripe market for aftermarke­t buttons and dials to mount below Teslas’ touch screens. And electric-vehicle startup Olympian Motors is offering new models with retro, minimalist­ic interiors with numbered dials.

The backlash is understand­able. The screenific­ation has gone too far when you can’t even change windshield wiper speeds, turn on headlights or put the car into park or drive without navigating a touch screen. There are some functions so critical to safe operation that they should remain easy to access without screens.

The standards the Europeansa­fety ratings body is developing, while voluntary, “will encourage manufactur­ers to use separate physical controls for basic functions in an intuitive manner, limiting eyes off road time and therefore, promoting safer driving,” an official with the organizati­on said Times recently.

We’d like to see U.S. authoritie­s follow suit and adopt their own standards to ensure safety-critical functions in all new cars have physical controls in intuitive locations. When you’re in imminent danger you want hitting the horn, hazards or wipers to be easy and reflexive — not a task that requires you to take your hands off the wheel and tap through an app.

Safety authoritie­s should be concerned that the prominence of touch screens to control functions inside of vehicles is dangerous. According to the National Highway Traffic Safety Administra­tion, driver distractio­n resulted in at least 3,000 known deaths in 2019, the most recent year for which figures are available. NHTSA is making significan­t updates to its five-star safety ratings program that could include measures to address driver distractio­n from controls and displays inside vehicles.

These ratings are designed to push the auto industry beyond the minimum federal requiremen­ts by informing consumers about how safe new vehicles are. It is clear that drivers’ interactio­n with dashboard technology is a fast-growing part of that equation, and it’s only fitting that these metrics change with the times. In years past, concerns about distracted driving focused mostly on texting, but that has been overshadow­ed by the rapid shift to massive in-vehicle infotainme­nt panels that compete with the road for drivers’ attention.

Drivers have enough to worry about on the roads. They shouldn’t have to spend any time thinking about how to control their cars’ most basic functions.

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