My IONIQ PHEV finally arrived today.
635 page manual, and they're never written in user friendly format that makes things easy to find.
The parking brake was my first battle. It is a small button/lever fly by wire, with no immediately obvious suggestion on whether to pull the switch up or push it down, but thankfully decades of random button pushing experience came to the rescue. It was a small, but meaningful, win for me.
It took about ten minutes of fannying about to get it to charge at a roadside charging point, first problem was which cable to use, second problem was how to open the charging port flap: the petrol flap, which is separate, has a button on the dash, whereas the charging port is a toggle push open/push shut, and the first time I tried "the obvious" I didn't push hard enough.
Anyway, it's charged, 30 miles for £15, that's the encouragement Londoners get for going electric, so I'll be sticking to petrol
Cars are becoming incredibly over-complicated these days. There's no fewer than twelve buttons on the steering wheel, not including the horn.
I managed to get a handful of DAB/FM stations programmed up reasonably easily, and paired up my phone for the AmpHour. Beyond that, the remaining 630 pages of the manual were a little daunting, so I went back indoors and took advantage of a short lie down to cope.