macb00kemdanno
Well-Known Member
- First Name
- Brandon
- Joined
- Feb 19, 2024
- Threads
- 6
- Messages
- 298
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- 740
- Location
- Garner, NC
- Vehicles
- 2024 Tesla Model 3 Long Range Dual Motor, 2023 Tesla Model Y Long Range
Every other vehicle sold in the U.S. has rear door child safety locks — it’s a safety requirement that’s been around for FOUR decades.So just to play Devil's Advocate here.
What if Rivian and other manufacturers provide an internal release similar to the front doors as many advocate and a number of kids manage to fall out from a moving vehicle by using it to override the software driven child lock? There is a reason why child locks were implemented in the first place after all.
It seems the odds of a child falling out because they are messing around with a door latch on mass produced cars is going to be much higher than the very rare car fires that seem to be driving the expressed concerns about the current system.
I do notice that no R1S owners seem to have picked up on the third row egress issue I highlighted in the original post, so I'm curious if none of them ever put people in that third row because of the risk?
In most vehicles, it's a little latch/switch/key cylinder on the rear edge of the door. This isn't rocket science.
As for third-row egress, they would have to exit through the second row, which would be even more difficult because they would have to climb over seats, pull off a panel, and pull a cable to get out.
Anyway, here's a BRIGHT idea:
If you are going to do electronic child locks, rear physical door handles should be MANDATORY in the rear seats. That way, if the child locks are activated, the crash will unlock it immediately, allowing the rear passengers to escape WITH the handle.
I also don't understand your comment about a child overriding a software-driven lock while stationary or while in motion. Even with physical rear door handles, they can only open the doors if the parent has not enabled the child safety lock feature on the rear door. If the parent was dumb enough not to enable the lock, of course, they could fall out.
And adding on to that, many cars won't even let you open the door once you reach a certain speed anyway -- even without child locks enabled.
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