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40 Useless Car Features Automakers Got Away With

Cameron Eittreim February 18, 2020

Automakers have to make money, and that often comes from the features in a car. The current crop of vehicles on the market has all kinds of new features. But not every one is a good one, and some features are downright useless. Features like heated and cooled steering wheels have raised price tags on cars for years. These interesting but borderline useless features seem to follow each generation of new cars.

Today’s automakers are in a race to see who can build the most luxurious car. Naturally, that means that more features are going to be in play than ever before. Another problem with the rise of electronic features is that it costs more to repair them in the long run. So read on to learn more about 40 of the most useless features that have graced automobiles in the last decade.

Sirius satellite radio
via: Toyota

40: Satellite Radio

When you think about useless features in a vehicle, satellite radio has to be at the top of the list. Satellite radio began to boom just as the iPod was taking off and this created a problem for the upcoming medium. Why pay a monthly fee for a satellite radio subscription when you can just play your catalog of music? Then the final death knell for Satellite radio was the rise of streaming services such as Spotify and Pandora. While most new cars come with Satellite radio as an option, most car shoppers don’t want it.

Sirus XM
via: Sirus

Eventually, built-in satellite radio decks are going to be a thing of the past. The satellite radios that you can get in your car today are outdated and the streaming services offer more in the way of content and quality. Nevertheless, car companies continue to try and push these subscriptions onto new car shoppers in an attempt to keep the medium alive. However, as most of you know, streaming from your phone is a whole lot easier.

Paddle shifters
via: Motorweek

39: Paddle Shifters

Initially, the concept of the paddle shifter had drivers excited, but as this addition has aged it’s not all that great. Paddle shifting doesn’t replace the feeling of driving a stick shift, in addition to that most cars that are equipped with paddle shifter have a CVT transmission. The paddle shifters are a great idea if you are a professional racer, but in the real world, you’ll hardly ever use these. Driving with a stick shift connects you to the car like nothing else, but paddle shifters are just another thing to be fixed.

Porsche Macan
via: Blogspot

As automakers continue to innovate the transmissions in vehicles paddle shifters will start to fade. Transmission shifters are moving toward a dial design, which will eventually phase out the paddle shifter. This is one of those features that has hung around for too long and just takes up more space in the cabin. Paddle shifters are a fun concept, but in the automotive landscape, fun is oftentimes costly and useless.

BMW Gran Coupe Shifter
via: BMW

38: Glass Shifter

Opulence in vehicles has gone through the roof in the past decade, and BMW is at the forefront with the option to install a glass shift knob. True, the glass shift knob is a beautiful piece of decoration, but that’s just it. What are you going to do with this shift knob year from now when it becomes all sun-damaged. The illuminated X in the middle does a great job of setting the knob off, but we all know how expensive things like this can be to replace. You must have extraordinary love for BMW to order the glass shift knob.

850 Gran Coupe Shifter
via: BMW

There have been some of the wall accessories inside vehicles lately, but the glass shift knob is something else. If you aren’t lucky enough to have a Rolls Royce with the optional rain umbrella, the glass shift knob in the beamer is a great alternative. We’re not sure how long BMW is going to get away with keeping this feature alive. Glass shift knobs are not the first thing most drivers look for in a new luxury vehicle.

Lincoln Continental
via: Lincoln

37: Suicide Doors

Perhaps one of the most useless features that have been used on vehicles is suicide doors. These are doors that are hinged from opposite sides of the vehicle, very different than your standard pair of doors. The Lincoln Continental 80th Anniversary Coach Door Edition is the most recent vehicle to have this. The first problem with these doors is how wide they open, which makes parking in a tight spot difficult. Of course, there is the notion that if you have an expensive car like this you wouldn’t be taking it grocery shopping.

Lincoln Continental
via: Lincoln

Nevertheless, suicide doors are cumbersome, to say the least. There are only a few new cars that use this type of door and these models are very expensive. Seven production vehicles have this type of doors, but the Continental is being phased out for this year. The suicide doors are one of the most aggravating features that have been included in passenger cars.

Interlocking Seat Belt
via: Car Domain

36: Interlocked Seat Belts

Remember during the ’80s and ’90s when your seatbelt would automatically move up and down when you started the vehicle? These seatbelts were interlocked and were a fixture of early model Hondas during this period. Interlocked seat belts didn’t last for long, because safety was questionable at best. Most consumers would forget to buckle the bottom portion of the belt, therefore causing injury or death. By 1995, new vehicles were equipped with airbags and the need for these disastrous seatbelts was negated.

Interlocking Seat Belt
via: Car Domain

Interlocking seatbelts had a good premise to ensure that the driver was wearing a seatbelt. But the design wasn’t thorough enough and the result was injuries. Not to mention the fact that the motors would burn out and the seatbelt would get caught in the track often. Overall not a very good design when you think about how popular some of these cars like the Accord were at the time.

Rearview Mirror
via: Car Domain

35: Motorized Rear View Mirrors

Motorized rearview mirrors are something that was introduced during the ’90s in high-end luxury cars. Why a rearview mirror would need to be automated was beyond most, especially since it is within reach of the driver. Part of the thinking behind this move was that the mirror would conform to the driver of the vehicle. Mercedes had the technology in its 1994 line of vehicles and most of the automotive public was not impressed.

rear view mirror
via: Car Domain

As with most aspects of the automotive market, it’s a system of trial and error, to see which features stick with consumers. Motorized rear view mirrors are not something that stuck on for any period. Since you can freely adjust the mirror with ease, there’s simply no reason to pay for another expensive interior piece down the road. Motorized mirrors are an often forgotten relic of ’90s automotive technology.

windsheild wipers
via: Motorweek

34: Moisture-Sensing Windshield Wipers

Rain is one of the most hazardous driving conditions, and a good pair of windshield wipers make all the difference in the world. The right pair of windshield wipers will make the difference between visibility and none. However, some automakers figured that it might help the consumer to introduce Moisture Sensing Windshield Wipers. These are computerized windshield wipers that can sense moisture, a good idea in theory. The problem was that the wipers could never adjust right to the rain, and if there was heavy rain the wipers might be delayed in their response.

Windshield Wipers
via: Autoweek

The problem is that you can’t risk a mistake when it comes to safety, and a downpour can happen out of nowhere. Windshield wipers are downright one of the most important parts of a vehicle, you need them no matter what. Automating such a dire piece of the vehicle is not a smart move until the technology has advanced somewhat. That’s why you don’t see moisture-sensing windshield wipers much anymore.

Volvo Wagon
via: Car Domain

33: Headlight Wipers

You’ve probably seen German and Swedish cars that have tiny windshield wipers on the headlights. These are seldom seen much anymore, but during the nineties, this was sort of a status symbol. Only higher-end cars had such systems on them and it would show off a bit of opulence. But for the most part, these wipers didn’t accomplish much, especially not in suburban settings. The actual usage for headlight wipers is when you are driving off-road or in the mud. This was a rather pointless feature to put on passenger cars that largely never leave the pavement.

Mercedes SL 320
via: Car Domain

There are a lot of pointless features that are on older luxury cars, but these headlight wipers were by far one of the most idiotic. Unless you plan on rally racing with your vehicle like Colin Mcrae you won’t need a pair of wipers on your headlights. This could be why many consumers never actually end up using these.

via: Bing

32: Electronic Parking Brakes

Electronic parking brakes are something you’ll find in higher-end German luxury vehicles and even some newer domestic cars. While the electronic parking brake is a great concept at first, the love quickly wears away when the car battery dies. You won’t be able to unlock the parking brake and this can be a headache if the car has to be moved. We see that automakers were looking for a way to streamline certain creature comforts but this isn’t how to do it. The electronic parking brakes are a feature that drivers wish most vehicles would move away from.

via: Autoguide

Parking brake technology has changed a lot in the last couple of years. There isn’t always space in the cabin for that old-school parking brake lever. But when it comes to the convenience factor being stuck without the ability to move your car can be aggravating. Electronic parking brakes and the automization of new vehicles will create a lot more headaches in the long run.

Built-in safety seat
via: Motor Week

31: Built-In Child Safety Seats

This feature reared its head during the ’90s as the minivan was becoming an ever-popular mode of transportation. The problem with the built-in child safety seats is the fact that your child is not going to stay that size forever. This means that at some point in the future you are going to be stuck with a vehicle that has this feature. On top of that, when you go to sell the vehicle you’ll have to market it specifically to parents only. The automakers were attempting to make cars a lot safer for families but all this did was create a headache.

Built-in safety seat
via: Motorweek

High-pressure car salesmen were quick to point out the benefits of these built-in features. Most of the consumers that went for this have ended up dumping the vehicles. You’ll see droves of the cars that had these in the junkyard nowadays. There is no doubt that we’ll see this feature pop up again sometime in the future.

Modern Cigarette lighter
via: Motorweek

30: Built-in Cigarette Lighters

There was a point in time when cars were built to cater to smokers, and if you didn’t smoke you had a bunch of features for smoking. The built-in cigarette lighters are among one of the most obvious features drivers remember. You’d push the lighter in and wait for it to turn orange and pop out for you. The problem is that these were very unsafe, and many times a young child would get burned by playing around in the front seat. Sure, you didn’t have to carry a lighter around but you still had the risk of burns. Not to mention the fact that the lighter was useless for just about anything else.

Classic built-in cigarete lighter
via: Classic car

The vehicle lighters never had a flame, so you couldn’t do much with them other than lighting a smoke. Most cars came with a built-in lighter up until recently, when the public outrage against smoking caused everything to halt. These days, you won’t find an empty power port in most vehicles in the same area where the cigarette lighter used to be. The Marlboro man is probably quite sad at this fact nowadays.

via: Car Histories

29: Car Phones

Mike Tyson had one, your lawyer had one, and at one point everyone wanted to have a car phone built into their vehicle. The problem? The technology was going to change and this big chunk of telecommunications was going to be taking up your center console. Long before smartphones were a part of daily life the carphone was a great thing to have. These phones didn’t last long for several reasons, the first of which was the expensive phone plans. Unless you were high up in society the average person couldn’t afford one of these.

Car phone
via: Autoweek

Car phones have a place in automotive history and that’s all well and good. But in terms of practicality, the car phone was a waste of technology. There are thousands of cars still on the road that have these old car phones inside of them. A relic from a time when automotive technology was still coming along and moving into the future that we have today. So next time you see an old Lexus or BMW remember that it might just have an original car phone inside of it.

Toyota Tacoma cargo net
via: Toyota

28: Cargo Nets

During the minivan and SUV boom of the nineties, there was a sudden need for cargo organization because these vehicles had an open interior and cargo space it was much different than a passenger car trunk. Automotive companies realized this and start selling cargo nets and organizers right from the factory. These options were oftentimes very pricey and the result was never what the user guide suggested. Most of these nets were cheaply made and the actual stuff that we tend to haul around is much heavier than these net will hold.

Car Cargo Net
via: Amazon

In addition to the cargo net only being designed for a certain make or model, you also had to have it installed in your vehicle. All of this created a costly mess that many consumers went for, but the result was lackluster. Utilizing a cargo net didn’t improve the cargo capacity of your vehicle, and it didn’t organize anything. Automakers are still trying to perfect storage organization and cargo capacity to this day.

Sto-n-go Seating
via: Car Warehouse

27: Sto-N-Go Seating

Chrysler was at an impasse during the 2000s, as consumers were gobbling up SUVs and the minivan segment had become crowded. Chrysler had real competition in the form of the Honda Oddysey and the Toyota Sienna, and the GM trio minivans. This meant that the company had to find a way to improve on the aged Caravan and Grand Caravan trio. Thus, Sto-N-Go seating was introduced to the public. Traditionally minivans had bench seats that you could remove, but this would prove difficult due to the weight of the seat.

Sto-n-Go seating
via: Warehouse Auto

Not to mention the fact that you had to find somewhere to store these seats once you removed them. Sto-N-Go seating would allow you to stow the seats on the floor of the van, which in theory was a great idea. But the actual product was cumbersome and as the van aged the seating would become very difficult to stow away and oftentimes require repair. Not to mention that the replacement parts were dealership only.

Built-in Coolers
via: Autoweek

26: Built-in Coolers

Automakers have been searching for ways to connect with younger shoppers for decades. It seems that the go-to option is usually to offer some sort of a drink cooler. The Pontiac Aztek had a removable cooler and the Dodge Caliber had one built-in as well. This is a great concept in theory but the reality is that we rarely utilize these options. How often are you going to open your glove box for a cold one? You probably don’t and this is why the built-in coolers generally fade to obscurity.

Built-in Cooler
via: Mainstreet

It’s not that the built-in cooler is a bad concept. It’s who would use something like this. The average consumer will rarely use a drink cooler, but someone who was out in the construction field would. Nevertheless, automakers seem to keep trying to incorporate these drink coolers into their automotive designs.

Car door
via: Business Insider

25. Soft Close Doors

The soft-close door is a feature first introduced on the Acura Vigor. The motivation behind this feature was to save the paint. But if you don’t slam your car doors in the first place, you shouldn’t have to worry about it. The problem with soft-close doors is that the vacuum system in them will eventually break down. As with the Acura, this was a common and fairly expensive repair that would suck owners into a cycle of costly maintenance.

Aston Martin Car Doors
via: Aston Martin

Soft-close doors are among the most useless features in a new automobile. This feature did nothing to preserve the paint and in most cases, maintenance costs were extraordinary. Soft-close doors are a feature you’ll probably never see on most recent cars because they were so useless.

Lamborghini Doors
via: Edmunds

24. Automatic Doors

Automatic doors are another fairly recent feature of new cars. Depending on the style, automated doors are useless in most modern cars. However, automatic doors can be a great feature in cars that have shaved door handles.

Car Doors
via: Car and Driver

Automated doors come in several styles, and in terms of luxury are a pretty cool addition. But considering the way most cars look with automated doors, the feature is quite useless. Even the most modern luxury cars have tried to implement this feature without success.

Car interior
via: Audi

23. Massage Seats

As cars grow with the times, automakers are adding more comfort features. Back comfort is an important aspect, especially for drivers who have a long commute. Massaging seats in modern cars nowadays have tried various features. However, they just didn’t catch on with luxury car buyers.

Infiniti M35 Interior
via: Infiniti

The current crop of massage seats is a useless feature except for those consumers who commute a long distance. In future cars, there will probably be new massage features geared toward a certain part of the back.

Rear seat entertainement center
via: Gear Patrol

22. Rear Seat Entertainment System

At the dawn of the new millennium, there were a lot of cars that featured a rear-seat entertainment center. The problem with most rear-seat entertainment centers is that they become obsolete in a few short years. Cars that were utilizing VHS or DVD systems are now obsolete, which means they are useless until you upgrade them. The rear-seat entertainment system was a great idea for long trips, but how many long trips do people take where they require a system like this?

Lexus RX Rear Entertainment
via: Lexus

The current crop of rear-seat entertainment centers can stream media, which will help longevity. But for the most part, the systems still will eventually become outdated. This is a useless feature car manufacturers will continue to include in future crossovers just to increase the price.

S500 Interior
via: Mercedes

21. Folding Tables

As vans have evolved over the past few decades from conversion vehicles into minivans, tables were a normal feature. Some tables roll down from the rear seating. A built-in table is a great feature to have if you are driving an RV. But, for the average driver of a minivan, the built-in table feature is probably something you’ll never use.

Car interior tables
via: The Hog Ring

The application just doesn’t make any sense in the long run. While a table can be a great feature for the traveling family, for most drivers, it’s just another thing that will get broken after years of constant use. There’s just no real use for interior tables in the long run.

Gesture control
via: BMW Blog

20. Gesture Control

With the popularity of digital entertainment centers, there has been a rise in gesture controls. They are various ways you can move your fingers on the screen like you would with a touch screen device. The gesture control is something that automakers have been toying with for years. However, gesture control units are probably one of the most unused pieces of new car technology.

Gesture control
via: BMW

Because most display units are so small, it can be a problem to train your hands to use gesture control. The overall design of the current units still need a lot of work to make them a feasible option.

Touchpad Cadillac
via: Cadillac

19. Touchpad Controller

Another interesting feature that has made its way into most new vehicles is the touchpad controller. Rather than having a touch screen interface, the touchpad controller is an option some automakers have begun to use. Touchpad controls are nothing new in cars, but recently they have started to perfect the technology. With the rise in luxury features, it’s not uncommon to see some sort of a touchpad.

Touchpad Control
via: GM

But with touchscreen technology advancing with every product cycle, the touchpad is useless technology. It’s something that will just have to be replaced later on. There are no usable features that a touchpad controller can offer in today’s day and age.

Cadillac Escalade
via: GM

18. Concierge Lighting

Interior lighting has come a long way in recent years. Nowadays, many cars are now rolling out the red carpet. What this means is that concierge lighting is a feature you could see on higher-end luxury cars and it’s quite simple to install. The problem with concierge lighting is that it can be expensive to replace.

Cadillac Concierge
via: GM

This is a feature that most drivers don’t need because most cars have other forms of interior lighting. For that reason, the concierge lighting feature is something people will barely use as time goes on.

Dodge Journey Cooler
via: Dodge

17. Drink Cooler

Different automakers have toyed with the idea of adding drink coolers for years, but the ones in recent models have been incredibly useless. The modern car drink cooler is something you might never use once it is in your vehicle. The Pontiac Aztek, for instance, had a small removable cooler. This was something most owners never used although Pontiac intended it to be part of its recreational aspect.

Dodge Caliber Cooler
via: Dodge

The drink cooler function is a cool aspect of new cars, but it’s just not something the everyday driver is going to use. The modern drink cooler is just another useless feature most automakers got away with.

Social Media Center
via: Car Advisor

16. Social Media Suite

Do you want to post your car to your social media account? Some automakers are putting this feature into their vehicles. While social media is a big piece of modern life, it’s not something that you intrinsically need in your vehicle. Most modern vehicles have some type of social media suite built-in now. This feature can cause a distraction and you probably won’t end up using it in the long run.

Social Media Center
via: Dodge

The rise of social media is going to cause automakers to keep adding this feature to their cars. But if you don’t want to be always connected, it’s not something that you’ll use. Social media accounts and suites inside new vehicles are just ploys to make consumers pay.

Rav4 Rear Seat
via: Edmunds

15. Third-Row Seating in Compact SUVs

Perhaps one of the most unusable features to come at the dawn of the decade was third-row seating in crossovers. It all started with the 2006 Toyota Rav4 and has spread across various crossovers for some time now. The problem with third-row seating in these small vehicles is that there is just no room. The odds of finding feasible seating in such a small area is limited. The only people who end up being able to use the third row in these vehicles are children. Third-row seating also means you lose cargo space.

Rav4 Third Row
via: Edmunds

Automakers have been trying to find ways to increase the amount of space in crossovers. But the third-row option is going to go the way of most useless automotive features that have come and gone over the past decade.

1992 Honda Accord
via: Car Domain

14. Automatic Seat Belts

During the ’80s and ’90s, there were a lot of interesting features that made their way into cars. Perhaps one of the most unique was the addition of automatic seatbelts. These seatbelts would wrap around you once the car started. While this feature did increase the safety of cars in the long run, it was still a cumbersome addition to most cars.

1992 Honda Accord
via: Car Domain

Automakers eventually ended up getting rid of this feature because it just didn’t add to the safety of the car. Automated seat belts have not made their way back for some time, partly because of their clunky design.

Honda Civic Interior
via: Edmunds

13. Manual Windows

One of the features you’ll find on cars that are as old as time is manual windows. Towards the end of the new millennium, this was a useless feature most automakers eliminated. When you pay triple digits for a new car, the last thing you want to deal with is manual windows. The design of the crank window has come a long way, but you now seldom see a car that still has this feature. Manual windows were the only way to open a window when cars were a novelty.

Manual Car Window
via: Car info

But as time went on, the advent of power windows created a much better experience. Most of us don’t even think about using a manual window anymore except in classic cars.

Car Navigation
via: Edmunds

12. Built-In GPS

When cars first started getting more technologically advanced, GPS, or global positioning system, was one of the first additions. But the early adaptation of GPS was incredibly hard to use and navigate. As a result, most drivers opted for some type of external system, such as a TomTom or Garmin. The built-in GPS systems were also costly to update. Without updating, the directions didn’t include new locations.

GPS system
via: Edmunds

Cars such as BMW would support built-in GPS for some time, but other brands such as Acura didn’t. Nowadays, there are a bunch of useless GPS systems in vehicles that drivers on the used market can’t use.

Toyota Prius CD Player
via: Toyota

11. CD Player

The audio system has come a long way in vehicles since the days of the eight-track player. But once streaming came along, the need for a CD player was over. While there’s an abundance of compact discs on the market, the odds of you owning one is slim. There are few cars that still feature a CD player. If you manage to find one, you’ll probably only use it a few times, which is why there are so few anymore.

Chevrolet HHR Media Center
via: GM

The CD player was a great part of the evolution of media you could play anywhere. For in-car entertainment, the CD player was a welcome addition to the car radio. But as digital media and streaming have evolved, the number of people who still use the CD player is going away.

VW Beetle Wing Window
via: Car Domain

10. Wing Windows

Most cars during the ’70s and ’80s had this unique feature. Wing windows are usually the third window on the front or rear of the car. This was a feature that was useless because the windows were hard to operate. You couldn’t get a lot of air through them, which was the point.

The most common wing windows were on the original Volkswagen Beetle. But this feature made its way on lots of other cars as well during this period.

VW Beetle Wing Windows
via: Car Domain

Automakers eventually moved away from wing windows because they were not conducive to the design of the cars. Wing windows don’t do anything to benefit the driver of the vehicle. They were just another useless feature that automakers tried to incorporate over time.

Car Antenna
via: Car Domain

9. Power Antennas

Most drivers remember having a broken antenna on their first car. Chances are, you probably had a power antenna that would cause issues. The power antennas on most modern vehicles nowadays are part of the reason that carmakers stopped utilizing this feature. The first problem was that it could become costly to replace the antenna if it malfunctioned. In addition to that repair, an electric antenna was just as time-consuming as dealing with other aspects of the electric system. You’d need an audio specialist to fix power antennas, so most consumers didn’t want to deal with them.

Car Antenna
via: Car ID

Power antennas didn’t do anything to benefit the vehicle. Instead, they just became a cumbersome part of car ownership. The power antenna will go down as another one of those memorable car features that drivers never used.

RX7 Pop up headlights
via: Car Domain

8. Pop-Up Headlights

No one is sure what the idea was behind pop-up headlights since they didn’t benefit cars in any way. They were expensive to replace and when they got stuck, you either had lights or you didn’t. Even so, there have been various renditions of pop-up headlights over the years. The last two modern cars that had pop-up headlights were the C5 Corvette and the Acura NSX. Most carmakers moved on from these after the ’80s.

BMW 8-Series
via: Car Domain

However, there are still pop-up diehards who swear by these headlights. But for the most part, pop-up headlights are just another feature that people equate with bad ’80s engineering.

Car ashtray
via: Bing

7. Ashtrays

Although not a common feature nowadays, there was a time when smoking was acceptable. All the top-tier cars had an ashtray. This was in addition to the built-in cigarette lighters in cars as recently as the early 2000s. Smoking used to be the norm in most parts of the world, so you’d be hard-pressed to find a car without an ashtray. This was a semi-useless feature because most drivers and passengers would just flick their ashes out of the window.

Car ashtray
via: Edmunds

This became such a fire hazard, that in many states it became illegal to just discard your ashes out a car window. But automakers still managed to incorporate this feature into their vehicles, which in the long run was something drivers didn’t need.

Hand brake in car
via: Edmunds

6. Hand Brakes

For a long time, if you had any type of sedan or coupe, there was probably a hand brake in-between the seats. What happened to this feature? Hand brakes were never anything most drivers would use. Unless you lived in an area with a large number of hills, the hand brake was just a useless feature. You just wouldn’t use them unless you were trying to do something stupid or reckless. During the next decade, teenagers would get a hold of their parent’s cars and yank on the hand brake like there was no tomorrow.

Hand brake in car
via: Edmunds

The hand brake was only useful in certain instances like with a manual transmission. Other than that, this was just a useless feature. In the long run, automakers ended up adapting different technologies, making the handbrake a useless feature.

Silverado Bench seat
via: Auto Bytel

5. Front Row Bench Seats

At one point in time, all cars could seat six passengers. The sedan was known as the family sedan, long before the minivan or crossovers were even a thought. Because of this, most sedans had what’s called a bench seat, a feature that you just don’t see anymore. The last modern cars to have a bench seat was the Lincoln Towncar and the Chevrolet Impala. Otherwise, this feature is been all but gone. Consumers don’t want to pack the whole family into a sedan anymore so you don’t see the bench seat.

Ram bench seat
via: Auto Bytel

It’s a cool feature to have in a retro car, but you’ll never see a bench seat in a modern vehicle. It was just an outdated feature that people never tended to use.

sealed beam headlights
via: Hot Rod

4. Sealed-Beam Headlights

Early in the evolution of the automobile, there were various aspects of the car that most people find familiar. Old-school rounded headlights were a feature most automobile owners would come across. This was because the headlights were easy to replace. But as time went on, most automakers wanted to find different ways to make the exterior look a lot smoother. Soon, sealed beam headlights were born, becoming a feature on most cars.

Sealed beam headlights
via: Auto Bytel

It’s not that sealed beam headlights were bad, but it was a useless feature that didn’t benefit the car. Automakers have since moved on to different ways of designing headlights. Today, early sealed beam headlights are a thing of the past.

Digital Gauges
via: Youtube

3. Digital Gauges

During the ’80s and the early ’90s, most automakers were trying to make vehicles that were more advanced due to the rise in technology. However, digital gauges on vehicles like the Chevrolet Corvette and Chrysler Lebaron were far too complicated. There was a lot of information on the dashboard that drivers just wouldn’t use.

Even though the automakers knew that they continued to use these dashboards. Eventually, the analog dashboard was the norm on most vehicles until the next generation of cars hit.

Digital gauges
via: Youtube

Nowadays, most of your vehicle’s information is digital, which is a far cry from the lackluster digital dashes of the past. This was just a feature that most drivers never ended up using that was expensive to repair.

GM DRLS
via: GM

2. Automatic Lighting

Perhaps one of the most useless and sometimes dangerous features of automobiles was automatic lighting. This was something that you can find on cars toward the end of the ’90s and into the new millennium. The problem with automatic lighting was that most drivers would end up not paying attention to their cars.

Many drivers would assume that the headlights were on when they weren’t. This made it dangerous to drive at night and the visibility of the vehicles much lower.

Silverado DRLS
via: Car Domain

Automated lighting has changed a lot in the past few decades, but it’s still a useless feature. The more that cars are automated, the less attention drivers pay to the road.

Cadillac Eldorado
via: Car Domain

1. Cylinder Cut-Off

During the ’80s when the gas crisis was happening, many automakers including GM decided to start experimenting with cylinder deactivation. This was still a new technology, so most computers were not advanced enough, which caused a lot of frustration. The technology was especially bad for Cadillac because the Fleetwood was in the repair shop more than it was on the road. The same thing happened during the 2000s when GM and Chrysler begin to experiment with the technology again. However, the fuel economy was not better. Cylinder cut-off caused a lot of headaches for those mechanics who were unfamiliar with the technology.

Cadillac Eldorado
via: Car Domain

The cylinder deactivation of the past couple of decades was a useless attempt to increase fuel economy. It’s just not something that works on a vehicle that weighs quite a few tons and has a powerful V8 motor.

These are 25 useless car features automakers got away with for decades. If you’ve ever had to deal with any of them, you’re probably glad they are long gone. Some were useful at the time, but became obsolete with emerging technologies, while others were just plain bad from the get-go.

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