![]() ![]() ![]() The connecting cable needs to be modified.The Qi/aerial module needs to be swapped.The Phone Box "container" needs to be swapped.I found this article (in Spanish) from a user who is in the process of doing it on his Seat Leon: īased on everything I have been reading so far: Having done further research on the Internet, it looks like retrofitting a Qi charger is feasible, but it is not plug and play. I understand an alternative is to plug a 3rd party Qi charger into the USB socket inside the armrest, but if not prohibitely expensive I would prefer having the smartphone laying flat on the rubber mat of the Phone Box itself, rather than rocking about on top of a small separate Qi charger.Īs a bonus - and not sure whether this is linked to wireless charging or bluetooth connectivity - I would also love to find a way to enable the feature from the recent Audis providing a voice reminder to pick your phone up when you switch the engine off - as I have already forgotten it a couple of times under the armrest Since I have a smartphone that can be charged wirelessly, I would like to upgrade the Phone Box to the more recent model with built-in Qi.ĭoes somebody happen to know whether this is possible? In theory I guess I would have to swap the "container" under the armrest and deliver power to the built-in Qi charging mat? It's the version without the built-in Qi wireless charging. It came with the Technology Pack + Phone Box. So he's gone from a moderately-dangerous high school bully, to a filthy rich, vindictive high school bully.I just bought a second hand S3 cabriolet (8V). Biff once more has power over "lesser" people only now, he's been embarrassed by someone he used to consider insignificant. By allowing past-Biff to get rich, he no longer needs to grovel to George. However cranky he was before, figuring out that Marty was responsible for all his problems is only going to escalate his evilness.įuture-biff then goes into the past to provide past-Biff with the means to escape from that destiny. There's also a decent chance that future-Biff had started putting all the pieces together: he's now seen the same guy - Marty McFly - in three different years looking exactly the same. Once he figured out about the time travel, and heard Marty's plan to use the almanac, he saw a way to get revenge on his tormentor. In 1985, he saw Marty and Doc fly off in the DeLorean, so when he sees them again in 2015, he knew something was up. In the beginning of Back to the Future II, future-Biff has now spent a lifetime being abused by George McFly. George, for his part, doesn't seem to have many qualms about treating Biff poorly. He's stuck working for the guy that beat him up at prom, with no way out. He's just now scared of George, and had his reputation ruined by it, and it obviously ruined his life as a result. In Back to the Future I, Biff is still the same personality he always was. But Biff's underlying villainy is always there, and it comes out at every opportunity. Although it's presented to us as a "happy ending", with Biff getting what he deserved etc., from the perspective of Biff and George's characters, their roles have simply been reversed. ![]() The reason that middle-age Biff is no longer mean is because he's basically been beaten into submission by George. ![]()
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