I guess if you have one set, but there are usually two that come with most cars. Probably whoever grabbed theit preferred car key first means the other grabs their key for the second car?
As someone who used to work on other people's cars, I think I've had my knees jammed into the dash way too many times to ever want this on one of my cars. Fuck that.
I can relate to this so much lol. I'm very tall and I remember getting into the Mercedes of a little old lady. The seat started moving forward while the steering wheel extended towards me. Felt like I was about to be featured on the hydraulic press channel.
The absolute panic when you put the keys in the ignition and the seat starts moving forward. You try to move it back before your knee slam into the dash, but the controls arent exactly where you thought
Nope, I mean due to them being automatic when you start the car, and linked to the "driver comfort" profile stored in the key.
As soon as you start the car the seat starts cramming your knees into the dash if it happens to belong to a shorter person. And of course, there's no sign in the car that the owner is short because the seat moves all the way back when you turn the car off.
/Rant (sorry, the real problem in my opinion is that there isn't a resistance/safety sensor that stops the whole thing)
Same with my wife and I. Seat doesn't move, only adjust rear mirror. The side mirrors are set up for her since it's minimal adjustment for me, it's not worth it unless I'm doing a long drive like 3+ hours
I'm quite a bit taller than my partner, but she has a big bum and I don't and it nets out to us having the same seat position, just different seat back angle to accommodate our different arms
It's not a big deal. My SO and I are very different heights (like a foot/35cm), and it takes all of 10 seconds:
slide seatbelt adjustor up/down
move seat forward/backward
adjust mirrors
We do it like 2-3x/week, and as the taller person, I'm totally capable of doing the adjustments while driving out of the neighborhood. It's really a non-issue.
When I drive my girlfriend's SUV, I have to stand outside of it and work the controls until I've got enough room to get in. It's not awful, but does kind of suck on hot summer days when I just want to be in the air conditioning.
Our old (2006) minivan has an electronic adjustor, so I just hold that down while getting in (butt in seat, press button, swing legs). Our other car (2007 sedan) is even easier, since I just tap the adjustment bar under the seat and it slides back as I'm sitting on it (again, sideways). Then I adjust the shoulder seat-belt just before grabbing the belt to buckle, then I adjust the rear-view mirror while checking as I back up. It's pretty smooth and routine.
Our AC takes a while to turn on anyway, so I don't expect any AC until I'm at least a mile or so down the road. We park in the shade (garage at home and work), so I don't need the AC anyway when setting out.
My car does this automatically depending on the key fob used, or the smart phone that's closest to the driver seat depending on which you are carrying. Seat, and mirrors.
My wife and I happen to use the same seat position and wheel position, so we just have to adjust the rear view mirror and during the time of year when it's really hot/cold maybe adjust the vents to how we each like. Takes like 5 seconds to adjust
The OP did not say what kind of cars they have. It is possible to have 2 cars with memory seats and mirrors. Now if only we could get memory rear view mirrors on the same cars as memory seats. Oh and seatbelt height adjustment memory.
I wouldn't call it a luxury car feature. In the US basically every car >30k has that. And most new cars cost >30k at this point. Basically every trim over base that's like the first thing they add.
I had a Ford Focus rental car with power seats once.
When I bought a $50k US car in 2017, only the top trim had memory seats, and they penny pinched it off the top trim hybrid model so I couldn’t get them at any price.
Some OEMs do stuff weird. Hyundai and Kia are some of the worst. Some common features are on the trim just above base, the rest are all in the top trim.
When I bought my Outback in 2018 every trim besides base had it. But that Focus for example was a top trim and apparently only top trim has that. Granted that's an smaller economy car, vs the Outback.