The 1940 Packard was the first car to offer factory-installed air-conditioning.
By 1969, more than half of all new cars sold in USA were equipped with A/C.
In a 1971 front-page story, the New York Times implicated air-conditioning in the death of the convertible, postulating that: “In the age of air-conditioning, real air has lost its value.”
Heater and ac are 1000%
Are you slightly mad ?
I don’t know what either comment means, but okay.
Those are essential to a car. Hot and cold weather exists. We require both if those things for cars to function correctly.
Why would you think they were extras ?
They were extras for quite a long time. AC in particular.
Probably not in a hot country. You would die without ac
The 1940 Packard was the first car to offer factory-installed air-conditioning.
By 1969, more than half of all new cars sold in USA were equipped with A/C.
In a 1971 front-page story, the New York Times implicated air-conditioning in the death of the convertible, postulating that: “In the age of air-conditioning, real air has lost its value.”
Fair enough. But say the Sahara. If you drive with no ac you will likely perspire. So you just can’t drive in a hot metal box.
Was heat always available ?
Yes, because the engine makes a lot of heat for free. Cooling requires an additional system to be built in