Among the laundry list of improvements are more upscale materials, an optional seven - inch touchscreen infotainment system with Apple CarPlay and Android Auto connectivity, and — perhaps best of all —
a physical volume knob replacing the finicky slider.
Disappointingly, there's
no physical volume knob on the center stack — that giant one you see is the mode dial.
The standard 5.0 - inch infotainment system lacks touch capability, but every trim above the base LX gets bumped up to a 7.0 - inch touchscreen with
a physical volume knob.
And perhaps best of all, the infotainment system now has
a physical volume knob.
There is
no physical volume knob, just up / down buttons on the passenger side of the touchscreen and on the steering wheel for the driver.
Honda, why, why, why??? You would have been better off with a large 8» + (think along design lines of Tesla) high - res, easy to see, operate, fast display (yes and with
a physical volume knob too!)
Similar to the system found in the new Ridgeline, the touchscreen infotainment system is a welcome upgrade from Honda's past offerings, though as we noted during our time with Honda's pickup, the lack of
a physical volume knob makes using the audio system more of a headache than it should be.
Dashboard tech has been overhauled and now features Android Auto, Apple CarPlay and
a physical volume knob!
-- now features
a physical volume knob.