Quote:
Originally Posted by Martinjlm
I highlighted what sets you apart from a vast majority of the driving public. I have shown countless numbers of friends and relatives how to set their mirrors to eliminate blindspots. Most of them have gone back to the "normal" way of setting their mirrors. The way where when you look in the mirror you see the side of your own car. THAT is the type of person Chevrolet still needs to sell to. That is the type of person that will sit in the car in the showroom and say "Wow...blindspot. This falls off my shopping list". They will, as you point out, not give the car a fair shake. So GM either needs to take that excuse away from them (significantly improve visibility) or just deal with the fact that a large number of potential buyers will walk away from the car over something that they (shoppers) can easily correct.
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Crazy what setting your mirrors correctly will do. I do not have blind spot monitoring or anything like that all I have is a back up camera. In the six years of owning my Camaro since new I have not had a single issue with visibility. People then get mad at me because my experience with the Camaro does not fit their narrative. I have said it in another social media group if you cannot handle the Camaro in this regard then you probably cannot handle that dream car you want because the ones I see on peoples list have the same or worse visibility. Yeah GM will probably have to adjust to people who don't do things properly.