What 10 Problem Rides Taught Us About Building a Better Display
Thesis:
We didn’t start with features—we started with failures. Every frustrating ride taught us what not to accept. Here are ten rides that shaped NextRide, and the design choices they demanded.
Ride 1: Midday glare on a ring road
Problem: Maps faded into sunlight.
Decision: A high-brightness 800-nit panel, 60 fps rendering, and adaptive brightness that thinks faster than your eyes. The result: glance → read → act.
Ride 2: Tunnel → sun → tunnel
Problem: Harsh transitions blinded the rider.
Decision: Faster ambient-light sensing and a color system built with generous contrast margins—smooth light, steady focus.
Ride 3: Alpine rain at 5 °C
Problem: Wet gloves triggered random inputs on a consumer tablet.
Decision: Glove-tuned touch stack, larger interface targets, and IP67 sealing. Rain became a backdrop, not a hazard.
Ride 4: City RF soup
Problem: Bluetooth audio vanished in dense intersections.
Decision: Re-engineered antenna layout and robust Bluetooth 4.0 link logic for urban environments. Dropouts? Practically extinct.
Ride 5: Summer traffic heat soak
Problem: Consumer screens dimmed; apps throttled.
Decision: Full thermal management and a −20 °C – +70 °C operating range, ensuring your display performs like your engine—consistent under pressure.
Ride 6: Gravel chatter
Problem: Continuous vibration wrecked mounts and scrambled devices.
Decision: Reinforced housing and vibration-resistant mount design. Your primary phone stays safe in your pocket—exactly where it should be.
Ride 7: Gloves at a toll booth
Problem: Multi-layer menus meant missed exits.
Decision: The “Two-Move Rule.” Any critical function is reachable within two deliberate actions. Simple. Predictable. Rider-first.
Ride 8: Urban canyon GPS
Problem: Position drifted between skyscrapers.
Decision: Dual-band GPS + GLONASS tracking at 10 Hz. Faster updates. Smoother maps. More trust in your path.
Ride 9: End-of-day fatigue
Problem: Tiny UI elements and cluttered layouts make your eyes work harder after a long ride.
Decision: A rider-focused interface with clear, spacious layouts, high-contrast icons, and intuitive navigation—everything designed to keep interaction effortless, even when fatigue sets in.
Ride 10: The unseen threat behind
Problem: Riders often misjudge vehicles lurking in their blind spots, creating sudden hazards.
Decision: The idea for the R1 Radar Warning Module came from rides like this. Its millimeter-wave BSD radar scans a 130° rear field up to 30 meters, automatically detecting approaching vehicles in your blind zone. When a threat enters, the system lights up a visual alert—adding an extra layer of assurance to every lane change and overtake. What used to be unseen is now instantly visible, giving you more confidence and control on the road.
Sizes that fit every cockpit
7" – Long-haul clarity.
6" – Fits naturally in your cockpit.
Conclusion
Every “why did this fail?” became a “how do we make it invisible?”
NextRide is built from those answers—a display that rides like a pro: steady, smooth, and confident.
Ready to upgrade your ride? Explore NextRide displays →
