Sponsored

Jac

Well-Known Member
First Name
Jacob
Joined
Mar 16, 2022
Threads
39
Messages
492
Reaction score
880
Location
Connecticut
Vehicles
Rivian R1S, Volvo XC40, Honda VFR1200X
Occupation
Retired
Clubs
 
Yup, 100% with you. Annoying to have waited 3 years for this disappointing answer, especially considering CS had said several times in the last 2 years the feature was thereā€¦all this from a startup helmed by a CEO with several young kids who said his wife gave input on access etc.

While I doubt cup holders and climate zones will be a dealbreaker for many, this, coupled with the absence of a captain chairs option, will be for several reservation holders with more than 2 young kids.

And for the ā€œjust chillā€ fanboys on hereā€¦ please do tell me what incorporating this important feature for some would have taken away from those who wonā€™t need it?
Iā€˜m sitting here reading the back and forth about third row access thinking thereā€™s yet another segment of R1S reservation holders (including me) who never wanted any third row in their R1S configuration and were disappointed Rivian discontinued that choice.
Sponsored

 

Gator42

Well-Known Member
Joined
Dec 3, 2020
Threads
13
Messages
880
Reaction score
1,455
Location
SC MA NV
Vehicles
2020 Defender
Iā€˜m sitting here reading the back and forth about third row access thinking thereā€™s yet another segment of R1S reservation holders (including me) who never wanted any third row in their R1S configuration and were disappointed Rivian discontinued that choice.
With a rear mat on top the 3rd row disappears completely, no?
 

ranieri

Well-Known Member
First Name
Sean
Joined
Oct 23, 2021
Threads
13
Messages
176
Reaction score
377
Location
Windsor, CT
Vehicles
Volvo XC90 T8
Occupation
photographer, real estate agent
Is there a reason why you cannot or don't want to use the 3rd row for car seats? I assume still full car seats rather than booster seat.

When our kids were that age, we'd secured two car seats in the 3rd row of XC90 and workout great.
I have a 6 week old and a 2 year old (and 9 and 11 year olds). I need to have access to the young ones. I can't stick them in the 3rd row.

In my VW Atlas, I have the two little ones in the 2nd row door seats and the 11 year old in between them. The 9 year old goes in the 3rd row. The 3rd row access is super easy because the entire 2nd row seat tilts forward with the carseat in it.

I'm going to see how it works. I see two options. Maybe the access is ok with the 2nd row seat sliding forward enough for my 9 year old to climb back to the 3rd row. Otherwise I'll have to put the two car seats next to each other, and the 11 year old will sit by the door.

It's not the end of the world. I know these are silly first world problems. I have just grown accustomed to my current functionality.
 

jjwolf120

Well-Known Member
First Name
John
Joined
Feb 25, 2020
Threads
1
Messages
784
Reaction score
1,122
Location
Arcadia
Vehicles
Rivian R1S
Occupation
TPA
The problem with your logic is...who decides what "real" problems are? You?
I decide what the real problems are!

The issue is that people are often complaining vociferously about minor details and this fills the thread up with noise. People might be reading this thread to find out details of what the manual says instead of what feature someone thinks is missing.
 

Jac

Well-Known Member
First Name
Jacob
Joined
Mar 16, 2022
Threads
39
Messages
492
Reaction score
880
Location
Connecticut
Vehicles
Rivian R1S, Volvo XC40, Honda VFR1200X
Occupation
Retired
Clubs
 
With a rear mat on top the 3rd row disappears completely, no?
Thatā€™s my fall back plan but Iā€™ll still have to contend with the unwanted padded third row armrests with dogs in the area behind the second row.
 

Sponsored

SoCal Rob

Well-Known Member
First Name
Rob
Joined
Apr 19, 2021
Threads
28
Messages
2,108
Reaction score
4,449
Location
Southern California
Vehicles
Rivian R1S & VW ID.4
Occupation
Information Technology
Clubs
 
I'm not trying to pick on you because you seem pretty reasonable, but a $50k SUV built in 2006 is a $71.5k in 2022 dollars so it's not like you're paying more for less now.

For the more direct comparison, I can build out a "comparable" Defender S that hits my high points for around $70k, but that's with the P300 and judicious screening of options that come nowhere close to what Rivian is offering. Step up to SE and add 3rd row, climate packs and all the advanced suspension and electronic goodies required to actually match the R1S (plus 3 zone climate lol), now you're close to $80k (remembering R1S is $70k after rebate) with half the horsepower and an arguably less capable suspension. Choose the V8 for an even fairer comparison and now you're over $110k!

All that to point out, again, that we're in no way getting "screwed" by the absence of these features.
I appreciate you being reasonable, too.

I think it could be fair to say that with an inflation adjusted cost of $71.5 for a (near) luxury SUV with 3 zones of climate control compared to a $79,925 Rivian R1S (my build, which doesn't include extra cost paint or interior) with 2 zones of climate control it is getting less zones of climate control for more money. Now, what is hard to determine is if the rest of the myriad of other differences between the Rivian and the Land Rover make it a reasonable comparison. Even if you ignore the fundamental difference of the drivetrain, the Rivian (even better suspension, larger display, driver assistance systems, real wood trim, frunk storage, etc.) and the 2006 comparison vehicle LR3 (sun shades for all 3 rows of sunroof, real leather on the interior, 2 glove boxes and a center console drink cooler, full-size spare tire onboard, etc.) each have plusses and minuses.

I never said anything like we are getting "screwed" and I haven't even said that any of the features I want, which are pretty common features in similar vehicles, would be deal killers for me. As I said even before the March pricing increase/restoration, the Rivian is a good value to me when I look at what goes into the vehicle also taking into account the inherent risk of being an early adopter of a new model from a new company.

I always assumed that since there was a climate control panel accessible from the second row that there was at least an additional zone for the rear. I think this is a defensible assumption since I have never seen another SUV with a second-row climate panel and vents dedicated to rear passengers which DID NOT have its own zone. This is why I still think (hope?) that Rivian has the hardware in place and will enable the controls with a future OTA update. I seem to recall that Tesla did this with Model 3 or Y with heated steering wheel which was later added to the UI controls for the vehicles which already had the hardware present.

If Rivian as a startup company wants to be considered in the same class as the traditional manufacturers then I think they need to be competitive on their features for a price. So, as an example, maybe someday Rivian comes out with a trim level called Luxury Adventure which adds to the current Adventure trim: ventilated seats for the heated second row outboard positions, heated third row seats, a separate HVAC zone (or 2) for the rear, a power sunshade or electrochromic glass, and a HUD. I'd happily pay up to $7,500 for that and seriously consider it up to $10K. Of all those items the only one I expected to be in the existing Adventure package was a rear climate control zone.
 

SoCal Rob

Well-Known Member
First Name
Rob
Joined
Apr 19, 2021
Threads
28
Messages
2,108
Reaction score
4,449
Location
Southern California
Vehicles
Rivian R1S & VW ID.4
Occupation
Information Technology
Clubs
 
I decide what the real problems are!

The issue is that people are often complaining vociferously about minor details and this fills the thread up with noise. People might be reading this thread to find out details of what the manual says instead of what feature someone thinks is missing.
The issue is also that people try to invalidate or marginalize the omissions thus leading to more explanation of why people want or need specific features. If the, "I know what you want and need better than YOU do!" crowd wouldn't keep raising the issue it would probably die down a LOT faster.

Ultimately, we're all here to talk about Rivians and that's what we're doing. Hopefully in a civil way. It would be fantastic if the forum were structured in such a way that subtopics could branch away from a topic and leave the original topic dedicated to the title.
 

Gator42

Well-Known Member
Joined
Dec 3, 2020
Threads
13
Messages
880
Reaction score
1,455
Location
SC MA NV
Vehicles
2020 Defender
ā€¦Iā€™m still of the belief there will be an OTA surprise for the rear seats in the futureā€¦
 

mkg3

Well-Known Member
Joined
Nov 19, 2021
Threads
41
Messages
1,381
Reaction score
1,806
Location
SoCal
Vehicles
Unagi, Radio Flyer and Kette Car
Clubs
 
I have a 6 week old and a 2 year old (and 9 and 11 year olds). I need to have access to the young ones. I can't stick them in the 3rd row.

In my VW Atlas, I have the two little ones in the 2nd row door seats and the 11 year old in between them. The 9 year old goes in the 3rd row. The 3rd row access is super easy because the entire 2nd row seat tilts forward with the carseat in it.

I'm going to see how it works. I see two options. Maybe the access is ok with the 2nd row seat sliding forward enough for my 9 year old to climb back to the 3rd row. Otherwise I'll have to put the two car seats next to each other, and the 11 year old will sit by the door.

It's not the end of the world. I know these are silly first world problems. I have just grown accustomed to my current functionality.
First, I completely understand and recall when my kids were those ages. Mine are 2.5 yrs apart.

The thing is, 6 weeks old probably needs to be in the backward facing car seat in the 2nd row, but the 2 yrs old can be in the 3rd row. Since you have 11 and 9 yr olds, they can attend to whatever the 2 yrs old (and even the infant's) needs for a short period while you're driving, right?

The other thing is we did split the car seats behind the driver's side's 2nd and 3rd rows for a while. This way the passenger side 2nd row had free movements and access to the 3rd row easily. Besides, my wife could reach diagonally across to the 2nd row easily to attend to our youngest then (sometimes climbed into the back seats to attend to them).
 

Franksmartin

Well-Known Member
First Name
Frank
Joined
Jan 9, 2022
Threads
6
Messages
225
Reaction score
212
Location
Somerville MA
Vehicles
None
Occupation
Software
I appreciate you being reasonable, too.

I think it could be fair to say that with an inflation adjusted cost of $71.5 for a (near) luxury SUV with 3 zones of climate control compared to a $79,925 Rivian R1S (my build, which doesn't include extra cost paint or interior) with 2 zones of climate control it is getting less zones of climate control for more money. Now, what is hard to determine is if the rest of the myriad of other differences between the Rivian and the Land Rover make it a reasonable comparison. Even if you ignore the fundamental difference of the drivetrain, the Rivian (even better suspension, larger display, driver assistance systems, real wood trim, frunk storage, etc.) and the 2006 comparison vehicle LR3 (sun shades for all 3 rows of sunroof, real leather on the interior, 2 glove boxes and a center console drink cooler, full-size spare tire onboard, etc.) each have plusses and minuses.

I never said anything like we are getting "screwed" and I haven't even said that any of the features I want, which are pretty common features in similar vehicles, would be deal killers for me. As I said even before the March pricing increase/restoration, the Rivian is a good value to me when I look at what goes into the vehicle also taking into account the inherent risk of being an early adopter of a new model from a new company.

I always assumed that since there was a climate control panel accessible from the second row that there was at least an additional zone for the rear. I think this is a defensible assumption since I have never seen another SUV with a second-row climate panel and vents dedicated to rear passengers which DID NOT have its own zone. This is why I still think (hope?) that Rivian has the hardware in place and will enable the controls with a future OTA update. I seem to recall that Tesla did this with Model 3 or Y with heated steering wheel which was later added to the UI controls for the vehicles which already had the hardware present.

If Rivian as a startup company wants to be considered in the same class as the traditional manufacturers then I think they need to be competitive on their features for a price. So, as an example, maybe someday Rivian comes out with a trim level called Luxury Adventure which adds to the current Adventure trim: ventilated seats for the heated second row outboard positions, heated third row seats, a separate HVAC zone (or 2) for the rear, a power sunshade or electrochromic glass, and a HUD. I'd happily pay up to $7,500 for that and seriously consider it up to $10K. Of all those items the only one I expected to be in the existing Adventure package was a rear climate control zone.
Just FYI I think itā€™s fake wood, fiberglass.
 

Sponsored

CommodoreAmiga

Well-Known Member
Joined
Dec 30, 2020
Threads
39
Messages
4,104
Reaction score
7,711
Location
INACTIVE
Vehicles
INACTIVE

Zoidz

Well-Known Member
First Name
Gil
Joined
Feb 28, 2021
Threads
108
Messages
3,185
Reaction score
7,018
Location
PA
Vehicles
23 R1S Adv, Avalanche, BMWs-X3,330cic,K1200RS bike
Occupation
Engineer

caliwagon

Active Member
Joined
Apr 1, 2022
Threads
1
Messages
25
Reaction score
22
Location
Colorado Springs
Vehicles
VW Atlas, Jeep Wrangler, Volvo XC90
I have a 6 week old and a 2 year old (and 9 and 11 year olds). I need to have access to the young ones. I can't stick them in the 3rd row.

In my VW Atlas, I have the two little ones in the 2nd row door seats and the 11 year old in between them. The 9 year old goes in the 3rd row. The 3rd row access is super easy because the entire 2nd row seat tilts forward with the carseat in it.

I'm going to see how it works. I see two options. Maybe the access is ok with the 2nd row seat sliding forward enough for my 9 year old to climb back to the 3rd row. Otherwise I'll have to put the two car seats next to each other, and the 11 year old will sit by the door.

It's not the end of the world. I know these are silly first world problems. I have just grown accustomed to my current functionality.
The VW Atlas is probably the benchmark in the size class for 2nd and 3rd row space, packaging, and access. I feel like Rivian could have tried to beat the Atlas in this category (no driveshaft, no fuel tank, and boxier styling make it possible), but this was not Rivian's priority. The only question is how far off the R1S will be from the Atlas, Traverse, Telluride, etc. in this category.

If the R1S 2nd and 3rd row space, access, and carseat friendliness end up being poor for the size class, it may be worth waiting for the KIA EV9. With the success of the Telluride in part due to its minivan-like interior, KIA is not going to mess up the EV9's interior usability.
 

Matt D.

Well-Known Member
First Name
Matt
Joined
May 20, 2021
Threads
6
Messages
244
Reaction score
653
Location
Pennsylvania
Vehicles
Odyssey
Yup, 100% with you. Annoying to have waited 3 years for this disappointing answer, especially considering CS had said several times in the last 2 years the feature was thereā€¦all this from a startup helmed by a CEO with several young kids who said his wife gave input on access etc.

While I doubt cup holders and climate zones will be a dealbreaker for many, this, coupled with the absence of a captain chairs option, will be for several reservation holders with more than 2 young kids.

And for the ā€œjust chillā€ fanboys on hereā€¦ please do tell me what incorporating this important feature for some would have taken away from those who wonā€™t need it?
I guess the good news is that when I ordered my R1S I needed this feature but by the time I get it, I no longer willā€¦
Sponsored

 
 




Top