|
|
|
|
|
by alwa
279 days ago
|
|
Huh! Autolocking behavior has bothered me for as long as I remember seeing it, and I’d love to believe that it improves safety against crashes (rather than notional “bad guys trying to open the door on your journey” or something). It’s only ever inconvenienced me, never helped. I’m having trouble finding more formal explanations for what you’re describing, though. I see a lot of talk about how the latching behavior links the door’s steel into the rest of the body, but very little about the structural aspects of the locks that link the handles to the latch’s release mechanism. I’m the farthest thing from a car engineer, but I wonder if you’d know of anyplace I could read more about this structural aspect of locking design? Every time I accidentally lock out a passenger, I get frustrated: I’d find grace and patience easier to muster if I understood how someday it might save both our lives :) |
|
[1] https://www.federalregister.gov/documents/2007/02/06/07-517/...
[2] http://www.autosafetyexpert.com/defect_doorlatch.php
[3] https://bestsellingcarsblog.com/2023/10/media-post-actuator-...