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Has it gotten better than it was six years ago when I first got a vehicle with Sync? No argument there. Though referring to it as mature is certainly a relative term.
My frustrations stem from frequent experience. Just yesterday after starting my commute I had no audio and volume control was disabled. I had to pull over in my neighborhood, turn the truck off, wait a minute or two, then turn it back on. Boom, audio working again.
This doesn't happen every day, but it's at least 2-3 times a month (among a litany of other issues). So perhaps "sucks" is a bit harsh; But as I was sitting on the curb yesterday, I probably didn't utter the word "suck", but I can guarantee what I did use rhymed.
Yeah, I did not mean ‘mature’ to be a compliment ;-) Perhaps long in the tooth would be more accurate.
I can’t say I’ve never had these issues, but certainly with less frequency than you describe. Frustrating when it happens.
the no audio situation - did you leave the truck set on a satellite station? I’ve had this when I get the dreaded “sirius updating” status. You can’t change from the channel, source or do anything else while this is going on.
I’m convinced that it’s like this because they’re sourcing the cheapest hardware they can to fulfill the role and likewise skimping the s/w dev and support. Again, I’ve noticed some improvements over when I bought. Back when I had 2.2 and early 3.0 versions of sync, it was more prone to bluetooth drops, weird sync stoppages and oddities. It’s not immune now, but again for me it’s less vulnerable to the problems described. And I think others who have had repeated sync issues along these lines have sporadically found relief with a new APIM if I recall correctly.
I expect the next system to have similar problems because development always focuses on the more sexy new features, rather than fixing annoying bugs and problems.
Case in point: Why does Sync present a dialog asking if I would like to connect to wifi to get updates? Every. Single. Time. I start the truck. Hey Ford app owners: It's a vehicle, meaning it's not stationary. So shocker the primary wifi network isn't available each time the system starts. That's not poor development (the dialog is technically working as expected), it's poor product design.
I agree poor design. You can stop it by turning off automatic updates in the menu, and then try to update manually once in a while. Of course, even then it doesn't tell you if an update exists, or even if it did an update. Not user friendly at all. (Maybe it is a Chinese plot to screw with us)
actually, reconsider. These updates will sometimes hang the system until it’s completed. My mom likes to sew and a few years ago she financed a sewing machine for about the cost of a Ducati superbike. she needed service and asked if i could pick up the machine from a local shop for her. It turns out this fancy-shmancy sewing machine has all manner of features, threads the sewing needle for you, etc. They have classes on how to use it. Repair guy relates a horror story to me where some student showed up with her 5 figure $$$$$ sewing machine for class, fires it up and it instantly goes into wifi / auto-update. The poor woman is idle for 4 hours while this thing updates.
So the repair guy says ‘have her turn off the wifi connect and auto update’.
Yeah, I know it’s not a Raptor... but from the sounds of it mom’s sewing machine is technologically a few generations ahead of sync3...
I wonder if you might have a bad sync install? Any chance you ever did a full wifi update, or usb update and maybe it didn’t take? I’ve seen a bunch of things from go-pros to 6 figure linux server arrays exhibit this kind of weird, inconsistent and hard to troubleshoot behavior and be resolved by overlaying the install. Sure, it’s a very windoze like solution, but sometimes it works.