- First Name
- DontFret
- Joined
- Sep 22, 2025
- Threads
- 8
- Messages
- 66
- Reaction score
- 120
- Location
- Ontario, Canada
- Vehicle(s)
- 2025 Maverick XLT
- Engine
- 2.5L Hybrid
So cool. Would look great on a new Mav. Looks like a pizza plate!!Or this:
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So cool. Would look great on a new Mav. Looks like a pizza plate!!Or this:
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Must be. I’m not talking about a manual transmission. Any automatic transmission with a center console gear selector can be pushed from drive to NEUTRAL without pressing the button on the shifter itself.I never in many years had my stick shifter bumped in to neutral, but the dial has been bumped several times, I dunno if it's bad luck
Pretty sure it's a steel drum and those are musical notes.So cool. Would look great on a new Mav. Looks like a pizza plate!!![]()
Most of the ones I've driven require the button to be pushed to shift to manual gear control, but don't require the button to be pushed for neutral.Must be. I’m not talking about a manual transmission. Any automatic transmission with a center console gear selector can be pushed from drive to manual without pressing the button on the shifter itself.
That sounds right for my Hondas, but there have been manufacturers in the past where you knocked the gear selector to the side to get into a parallel forward/backward shift slot. Like this, if it renders anywhere near correct:Most of the ones I've driven require the button to be pushed to shift to manual gear control, but don't require the button to be pushed for neutral.
Yeah, I'm familiar with that pattern but I've never owned one, being nearly exclusive to Ford.That sounds right for my Hondas, but there have been manufacturers in the past where you knocked the gear selector to the side to get into a parallel forward/backward shift slot. Like this, if it renders anywhere near correct:
P
R
N.........-
D <> M
............+
corrected the typo.Most of the ones I've driven require the button to be pushed to shift to manual gear control, but don't require the button to be pushed for neutral.
I remember reading that Ford moved it there in anticipation of air bags being required. And a the time they didn't really know how to incorporate the horn button into the air bag. By the time air bags were actually required, they'd figured it outMom's 1979 Fairmont was like that as is my 1983 Mustang convertible....to honk the horn, you need to push the turn signal stalk in. Also there is, at the base of the steering column near the steering wheel, a button that needs to be pushed in to turn the ignition cylinder all the way off to remove the key from the ignition. Fun story, the girlfriend took the Mustang convertible out of the garage one day while I was at work to get it ready for a nice after work cruise....she was freaked out because she could not get the key out of the ignition cylinder and thought she had broken my Mustang....I reached in, pushed the aforementioned button and took the key out....she was so pissed.....lol.
That is what my "Designed by Lincoln Division" was about. My sis was in the hospital a couple of weeks ago and I was driving her MKC. Okay, it took me a few minutes to find those shift buttons. I don't know why they hide them in pain sight. It took longer to find the button to get the mirrors folded out.Took awhile to get used to the shifter on my Lincoln MKZ. Got used to it just like the dial shifter on my Maverick. Both free up space in the center console.
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At first when I saw the pictures online I thought I would hate the dial shifter. But now that I have used it a lot it’s really fun.For those that complain about the dial shifter... I present to you the 2024 GMC Terrain- What a nightmare design.![]()
one of the always-interesting things about out driving at an auction is gathering around and kibitzing when a driver is trying to figure out which exotic place this particular car put that release . . . which sometimes involves, "how in the @($^@ do I get this thing into revers???"Also there is, at the base of the steering column near the steering wheel, a button that needs to be pushed in to turn the ignition cylinder all the way off to remove the key from the ignition.
ahh, you never drove with the right kind of mental defective that thought it was funny to do from the passenger seat . . .I never in many years had my stick shifter bumped in to neutral,
Wasn’t the horn on those the inner half ring.? I don’t think you actually had to press that center button where the gear select is.. I could be wrong I just remember that some classic cars had that as a solution so you didn’t have to let go of the wheel to think the horn.Wow.
What happened when you REALLY needed to honk the Edsel's horn...
I'm thinking the possibility of testing the transmission park pawl strength at speed was a distinct possibility.
In the Maverick, the car won't let you pop into park or reverse, but did the Edsel?
The Mav's shift mechanism was really strange at first, but it's growing on me, but not like a fungus, as I am coming around to liking it.
For my wife, she doesn't like it much. That's okay, she can drive the Accord.
Right you are.Wasn’t the horn on those the inner half ring.? I don’t think you actually had to press that center button where the gear select is.. I could be wrong I just remember that some classic cars had that as a solution so you didn’t have to let go of the wheel to think the horn.
Sadly, (or in this case not very sadlyWasn’t the horn on those the inner half ring.? I don’t think you actually had to press that center button where the gear select is.. I could be wrong I just remember that some classic cars had that as a solution so you didn’t have to let go of the wheel to think the horn.