Most people will use the center console for things like that. Reaching across a vehicle to open a glove box to access your cell phone while driving is simply crazy and dangerous. My vehicle has USB ports for music and charging on the dash and in the center console.
With said USB port on the dash and center console, what purpose to does a hidden USB port inside a glove box really have? Most modern vehicles have charging ports in the center dash and center console for a reason. If a glove box port made sense, why don't manufacturers offer them?
Some people are pleasant enough to be around that they have other people ride in the car with them, they might like some here to charge their stuff too, or maybe charge camera batteries . I am not one to argue about having too many USB ports as I have personally never had too many. A lot of people like putting their radios in the glove box in Broncos and Jeeps, not sure you can power then with a USB though (never looked into it)
My garmin would take a USB and that would be an awesomely clean way to power it without having wires dangling across the dash.
I still would encourage people with setups like this to look at the vehicle condition for signs of aftermarket tuner use to help avoid serious mechanical problems. You do you, I'll do me, and avoid vehicles that look like this.
Surprising as it may be my 1985 truck shipped with exactly 0 USB ports so I had to add them. There was a metal blank over a hole in the firewall so I installed my ports into that blank, easily 110% reversable and without anything plugged in assuming you were allowed access to the truck you wouldn't know they were even there. It has a bluetooth radio and garmin GPS so once the phone is plugged in I have no need to touch it until I exit the truck. And that is just the outlet, I plug the cord in and my phone just rides in the passenger seat just like it does with my F-150 or our Bronco that has USB ports on the dash.
If you don't care about the damage of an aftermarket tuner some idiot used to damage a motor and transmission, GO FOR it and please don't whine when they fail. Granted, diesel pickups are the worst for this in the area I live in (more rural and farm-oriented) it is also an issue in larger cities with people going to aftermarket shops for all sorts of BLING to impress their Social Media friends.
Never said anything about aftermarket. Aside from BMW likely won't be doing the tuning and thus unless they have some deal worked out won't have access to it. I am the parts manager at a CDJR dealer. Sterling buys Ram trucks, changes things and then resells them as Sterlings with a different grille/badging. Electronically we can not do much to them, Sterling has their own programming. I would not be surprised if something similar happens here.
It's a crate motor. It won't freak out any reasonable mechanic. If it does, I don't want them wrenching on my vehicle!
Tell me you haven't worked on anything OE with a crate engine from another brand without telling me you have worked on anything OE with a crate engine from a different brand...
Word Police withstanding, motor or engine are common enough I don't think anyone confuses a Diesel with an EV! 🤣
Like a diesel electric locomotive... just needs a motor.
I don't hear Porsche owners complaining that their 911 or Macan can't be fixed in rural America.
I don't either but then there are three Porsche dealers an hour away as opposed to 10+ hours for the nearest Ineos dealer.
And, don't confuse television shows with reality!!! I liked Top Gear and Fifth Gear in years past but, they aren't 'documentaries'! Clarkson for example is more of a Social Media personality looking for 'clicks' and is not about unbiased automotive accuracy.
The Grenadier has enough payload and trailering capacity for most people who don't really need a 1-ton dually diesel with a >400HP and >1,000ft-lbs of torque to pull a mobile mansion or their daughter's horse!
It was an example of how things are different here than over there. They don't do farm trucks like we do. A 3/4 ton is the bread and butter farm truck here in the cornbelt and it is used an abused.
Horse people are horse people, they would only make sense to other horse people... if they didn't all hate each other.
WRONG! They will build it any way you want it based on available options. Want a base model with Rough Pack only? Sure, no problem!
Statistically that is the only way we get anything neat, Gwagon, Land Rover, Land Cruiser etc.
Car manufactures do model allocating, while they may be offered the more basic ones will probably be harder to find because they make more money in the more expensive ones. See also manual transmission Tacoma.
Again, you make a statement that is FALSE. I won't argue it is best but, plenty of farmers and ranchers use a Tahoe or similar vehicle in the Winter to chop ice on a pond or put range cubes in a feed trough for cattle. In particular, I see people with horses in an SUV with a bumper pull horse trailer frequently.
Never was the wrong word but I can't think of a one around here. An SUV impedes the use of pallets, aux fuel tanks for equipment and gooseneck hitches.
I did know one guy that bought old cheap minivans for a farmtruck. He would throw the disgusting rear seats in the burn pile and would have a huge enclosed cargo bay with a low load floor.
Horse/acreage people don't really count. We have an acreage and have hauled sheep in our Bronco for whatever that counts.