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Design question

itsonlycastles | 2026-02-26 16:01 | 6 views

Design question that someone might know the answer to? I just rented a model 3 which I love but my question is who was the mastermind or why when you want to go ( backward) into reverse you pull the handle up and when you want to go into drive (forward) you pull the handle down. isn't that like completely backward logic?? Everytime I get into the car I do it wrong? any insight out there that I'm just missing?

Comments (14)
Littlefinger6226 2026-02-26 16:09

Assuming you mean the gear stalk, it’s because it’s meant to simulate the gear shifter that normal cars have which typically have it as PRND, so up is R and down is D from neutral

JackfruitCrazy51 2026-02-26 16:11

They had to choose a direction, and I think up for reverse/down for drive works the best.

itsonlycastles 2026-02-26 16:13

Yes that what I meant, in a gas powered car with the shifter on the floor I think it makes sense on the column not so much, just one man's opinion 😁

[deleted] 2026-02-26 16:14

[deleted]

SE_MI_CT 2026-02-26 16:15

I understand the confusion though, because the on screen gear selector is swiping up to go forward and down to go backward, just like the orientation of the vehicle. But the gear stalk selector mimics a automatic transmission stalk where you pull down to get into drive so that kind of makes sense too.

peachfuzz0 2026-02-26 16:16

ICE cars with the gear shifter on the steering column has park at the top most position and drive at the bottom. Tesla probably put reverse up to reduce confusion.

w1lnx 2026-02-26 16:17

Because in internal combustion cars, the standard was selected generations ago. Turn signal, steering wheel, brakes, accelerator—all work exactly as people have used for about a century. What about the shift control? Previous cars had Reverse toward the top of the range and Drive toward the bottom. Or, rather, they were, from top to bottom: Park, Reverse, Neutral, Over Drive, D3, D2, D1 Rather than introduce a completely unfamiliar physical control standard, it made far more engineering and design sense to let customers rely on their existing, well-established familiarity and memory with certain critical operations.

Tbonejak 2026-02-26 16:29

Think about the natural inclination of when you turn your head around to reverse. Is it more intuitive to click down on the shifter? Or more intuitive to raise your hand up as your turn your head? I think it’s the former

meental 2026-02-26 17:33

This, 3 on the tree had reverse up and 1st down with N in the middle.

rvs007 2026-02-26 18:54

Wait til you get into the Juniper Model Y and you'll need to swipe the touchscreen in the opposite direction of the stock (Swipe up for forward, swipe down for reverse).

M1A1SteakSauce 2026-02-26 19:37

I think it makes more sense the way that it is. It just feels more natural

LordFly88 2026-02-27 04:50

I don't find that confusing. However, I did have a rental not that long ago (Polestar I think), where the selector is in the typical center console position. You push it FORWARD to go backwards, and you pull it BACKWARDS to go forward! I kind of get trying to mimick PRND, but when you only have R and D (because P is a completely separate button), it kinda falls apart. It felt backwards every time I got in it, and I had to look down at the selector every single time.

itsonlycastles 2026-02-27 11:19

We'll my friend that's me Everytime I get into the model 3 😝

LordFly88 2026-02-27 16:25

If it helps, the stalkless ones where you shift via the screen, up is drive, down is reverse.

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