I agree with you that most dealership sales associates' interest for the most part is making the sale and just enough for customer service / customer support. The time spent training a new buyer all of the functions of their new vehicle is less time to potentially make other sales. But there are so much different special functions in the new vehicles that I think you'll probably benefit more and retain everything you learn by watching YouTube and going through doing it on your own time than having a salesperson sit next to you in the vehicle to teach you every available function. It makes sense for the dealership to go through and teach some of most used or important basic functions of the new vehicle.In general, I really like the TRD OffRoad. The ride is slightly harsh on the highway, but it has wonderful manners, and handles quite nicely. My last new Toyota was a 1996 T100, so that was 30 years ago.![]()
Where the shock comes in is setting up the dash display. With 3 views, a bunch of various functions, and options for gauge style, Iām somewhat overwhelmed. What button to press, when to press it, and in what direction was frustrating. I was considering digging out an old IBM flowcharting template to help document the process. Holy **** Batman, Iām getting close to 80, and technology has left me behind. My daughters, both in their 50s, have newer Toyotas and said they struggled as well. Maybe itās not just me.
My impression is the dealers should take a couple of hours to walk buyers through the setup. After the sale, it seems things became a bit disinteresting for them.
Overall, itās a very nice and capable vehicle that will take me into country I want to fish, hunt, camp, and explore.
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