LeftieBiker said:Good for you, Steve. I don't want to see anyone hate their Bolt's seats - I want to see better seats offered.
Perhaps I just have enough extra cushioning built in that I don't notice it :lol:
LeftieBiker said:Good for you, Steve. I don't want to see anyone hate their Bolt's seats - I want to see better seats offered.
Perhaps I just have enough extra cushioning built in that I don't notice it :lol:
stevewa said:OK, so we took delivery on our Kinetic Blue LT today.
After all I'd read here I was prepared to sit in the car, drive it around and decide (or be told) that the seats were terrible and unacceptable.
It didn't happen. I'm a pretty bulky guy and the seats seemed fine to me. I did spend some time playing around with the adjustments....
gpsman said:stevewa said:It is a $16,000 class car with $16,000 of under the hood and chassis modifications to make it a nearly 250 mile EV. And the sooner people understand this the better.
YOU ARE PAYING FOR THE BATTERIES AND ELECTRONICS IN THE BOLT - NOT A LUXURY INTERIOR.
gpsman said:And you, like me, are able to spend a few bucks and make those improvements post-purchase.
I'm not happy with this.
It's just not a deal breaker for me.
gpsman said:Maybe a bit of weight is better" :lol:
Probably not.
gpsman said:I'm a pretty bulky guy and the seats seemed fine to me. I did spend some time playing around with the adjustments....
gpsman said:What I have a feeling is happening is:
Those of us already driving low end "economy" cars see the Bolt seats as typical, because it is what we are used to.
I think the Bolt seats are relatively thin, narrow, and relatively equal to other economy class cars.
What? You say the Bolt is not an economy class car?
Um... Ya... it is.
YOU ARE PAYING FOR THE BATTERIES AND ELECTRONICS IN THE BOLT - NOT A LUXURY INTERIOR.
gpsman said:YOU ARE PAYING FOR THE BATTERIES AND ELECTRONICS IN THE BOLT - NOT A LUXURY INTERIOR.
JupiterMoon said:Guys posting this stuff here is pointless.
If you want to get GM's attention, create a separate thread, post your vehicle information, when you got it, and write a small description of how you feel in the seats. Rate it as positive or negative. Honestly all this back and forth is utterly pointless. Even if GM is monitoring this blog, all this complaining in this fashion isn't going to get you anywhere because no one can make heads or tails out of it.
Here I'll start a thread....you guys do the rest.
http://www.mychevybolt.com/forum/viewtopic.php?f=2&t=5756
flamaest said:JupiterMoon said:Guys posting this stuff here is pointless.
If you want to get GM's attention, create a separate thread, post your vehicle information, when you got it, and write a small description of how you feel in the seats. Rate it as positive or negative. Honestly all this back and forth is utterly pointless. Even if GM is monitoring this blog, all this complaining in this fashion isn't going to get you anywhere because no one can make heads or tails out of it.
Here I'll start a thread....you guys do the rest.
http://www.mychevybolt.com/forum/viewtopic.php?f=2&t=5756
Done.
LeftieBiker said:you just don't car design seats from scratch, with new construction techniques, to save money. You choose a seat you already build that doesn't cost much, and make sure the car will accept it. Hopefully it will be found that Cruze seats will fit, with minimal adaptation.
oilerlord said:The Bolt's interior is somewhat narrow and making the seats narrow was likely a solution to mitigate that.
You're guess is as good as mine to what metrics were the most important in the seat design but looking around at the interior of the car, it's obvious that the materials used were chosen to save cost. The Bolt's project objective was a 200 mile car at $30K after incentives. Again, this is what a car built toward that singular project goal looks like. Not sure why people can't just accept the car for what it is. It looks and feels inexpensive because it is.
LeftieBiker said:You're guess is as good as mine to what metrics were the most important in the seat design but looking around at the interior of the car, it's obvious that the materials used were chosen to save cost. The Bolt's project objective was a 200 mile car at $30K after incentives. Again, this is what a car built toward that singular project goal looks like. Not sure why people can't just accept the car for what it is. It looks and feels inexpensive because it is.
And the only way that makes sense is if they don't really care to sell a lot of them - just win awards based on the specs and test drives by enthusiast magazines, and get ZEV credits. Because you don't sacrifice the driver's seat comfort in a car that costs over $30k if you want it to be a sales success.
devbolt said:You don't spend upwards of a billion dollars on a new car platform to avoid paying $25M in potential fines. If GM just needed to earn ZEV credits, they could've kept selling the Spark EV in low volumes, or bought excess credits from Tesla for much less than what the fines were.
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