BDay Brunch
TDI best features
VW features the BMW didn’t have:
– Bluetooth integration with address book
– SAT SiriusXM radio
– voice commands for phone, media, radio
– 60/40 folding rear bench
– heated seats and steering wheel
– remote opening trunk
Features I miss from the BMW:
– luxury suspension
– horsepower
– power sun shades
– adaptive window wipers
– cruise control buttons on steering wheel (VW has them on lever)
– substantial horn
Creepy
End of an era
First Drive – Passat TDI
My first impressions of the Passat are all positive. Very roomy cabin, with nice look and feel of all surfaces in plain sight inside the cabin.
The car is highly functional with huge legroom in the rear, a humongous trunk and split 60/40 folding rear seats for even more cargo space.
The engine is a civilized modern 2.0l directly injected diesel engine and it gets 45mpg when driven at 70mph on cruise control with the AC running – a given in Texas. The steering is responsive and the DSG shifting (double clutch manual-automatic gear box) silky smooth. The feature I like best though are the state of the art consumer electronics in the car that the 2001 BMW 740iL was lacking. Integrated Bluetooth, iPod integration, satellite radio and hands free phone integration, including sync’ed phone contacts, are all features unavailable in the BMW from 13 years ago. And I really love that stuff. The google maps NAV streams the audio for directions right into the premium speaker system – brilliant!
Low points of the vehicle are definitely (lack of) power: with 140 diesel hp this isn’t a race car. I’ll chip it at some point to 180hp but even then I don’t expect the car to outpace the 300hp gasoline competition from a full stop. Elasticity for acceleration from 35-65mph though will be the car’s strong point. Combined with the stellar fuel efficiency this is a neat package. Creature comforts are amazing considering the price tag. The suspension is just adequate, compared with the 740, but that’s kind of expected when comparing a $28k car with a $80k car when they were fresh off the production line.
So I’m quite happy with the car I got for $28.5k. Some features just stun me (hill start assist, electronic steering, SAT radio, auto dimming rear view mirrors – just to name a few).
Will I miss the Diva? Definitely. The 740 is hard to beat on the highway at 65mph+ speeds. But after driving her for 8 years or 80,000 miles it’s time to let go, as I’m not a car collector – or at least that’s what the wife says.
Our new family car – VW Passat TDI SE
Dixie Dude Ranch
Ro studying a cricket
On the Kindle
The original Kindle Fire is one of those devices that keeps amazing me. Now after some three years with it, it’s still going strong as my son’s youtube movie platform, streaming through my phone wifi hotspot in the car. This device has been dropped, drowned, overheated, deep cycled and whatever else you can throw at a consumer device. But it has never failed us. You plug it in to charge and it just does what it was meant to do. As a first generation product it was amazingly open and I never bothered to set it up as a true Amazon device. I just used it as a cheap Android platform. And it still works well. Compared against the other shiny offerings in that space of course its glory has faded, but that doesn’t take away from it’s usability. I’m still a happy customer, not something I can say about the Asus Nexus 7 (which died after four months). I also own an original iPad 1, an iPad Air, an iPad mini, a Galaxy TAB and a MacBook Air 11″. The Fire has aged well.













