The doors still stay locked when you stop. At least for mine the doors don’t unlock again until you put it park. They just lock when you start moving because the vehicle moving is a good indication that you don’t need the doors unlocked anymore.
That’s all bullshit of course. Cars lock the doors when going above a certain speed for the first time and the airbag control module always sends a crash signal across the various can buses during an airbag deployment event that is used by various other control units for example to unlock the doors or kill the gas pump. My twenty year old Audi had that
That sounds like a design problem that could be solved. At least for the whole doing wholly accidentally, me pulling the door handle because I’m stimming not withstanding.
What I learned about design decisions, especially in IT, is that there’s a reason why things are designed the way they are. Before proposing an entirely new solution to problems that can be seen due to the current design, I’ve learned to try to understand first. Only tech bros will reinvent trains or build Cybertrucks.
It’s to prevent you from accidentally opening the door.
It’s more to keep you from being carjacked than for accidental door openings.
yes protect me from being carjacked at speed
The doors still stay locked when you stop. At least for mine the doors don’t unlock again until you put it park. They just lock when you start moving because the vehicle moving is a good indication that you don’t need the doors unlocked anymore.
the automatic transmission cars ive driven that were similar locked when you took it out of park
That’s all bullshit of course. Cars lock the doors when going above a certain speed for the first time and the airbag control module always sends a crash signal across the various can buses during an airbag deployment event that is used by various other control units for example to unlock the doors or kill the gas pump. My twenty year old Audi had that
I still can open the doors from inside, just not from outside
That sounds like a design problem that could be solved. At least for the whole doing wholly accidentally, me pulling the door handle because I’m stimming not withstanding.
What I learned about design decisions, especially in IT, is that there’s a reason why things are designed the way they are. Before proposing an entirely new solution to problems that can be seen due to the current design, I’ve learned to try to understand first. Only tech bros will reinvent trains or build Cybertrucks.
Agreed, I should e specified that I meant old school pull handles for the inside of the car. Like what 90s and early 00s Toyotas had.
Children are a design problem