[DML] Safe, Practical Gullwing Doors vs. Dangerous, Deadly Corvette Door
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[DML] Safe, Practical Gullwing Doors vs. Dangerous, Deadly Corvette Doors.
- From: "therealdmcvegas" <dmcvegas@xxxxxxxxx>
- Date: Wed, 31 May 2006 16:20:59 -0000
--- In dmcnews@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx, "Ryan Wright" <ryanpwright@...>
wrote:
>
> Robert,
>
> On 5/29/06, therealdmcvegas <dmcvegas@...> wrote:
> > I have a long list of reasons why I don't like the
> > Corvette (including a door malfuction in a C6 where I got trapped
> > inside the car)
>
> Yet you drive a DeLorean?!!?? ;-)
>
> -Ryan
>
It sounds funny, I know. But I've never been trapped inside of my
DeLorean, nor anyone elses. And the only time I've ever seen a
DeLorean door get jammed, was either because of the outer door
handle getting pre-tensioned, or a forigen object getting caught in
the door. And to release stuck doors isn't a problem. You just press
down on the interior handle, and then you can unlock the doors.
Simple as pie. And if you've got an early car with no guide blocks,
you just have to push a bit harder. They don't pose a threat in the
least.
Now, let met explain my nightmare with the C6 Corvette.
First, you've got to know how the doors work (this is boring, but
vital to my story). Your regular car and truck door has a Striker
Pin, or Loop mounted to the door frame. You then have the latch
assembly that is mounted inside the door. To open the door, you
simply pull on either the internal, or external door handles. These
are physically connected to the door latch by various cables, and
connecting rods, and the latch will release the Striker Pin. Same
with the locking mechanisim. The lock is actually contained within
that latch on the door, and to lock/unlock the latch, is the same
process. Power door locks are simply solenoids, or actuators that
pull and push on the rods connected to the door latch.
The DeLorean is not unique from any other car on the road. It just
happens to have a 2nd latch in the front section of the door, and
has extra rods to make it function as well.
Now, let's talk about the Death Trap called the C6 Corvette.
The C6 Corvette has a backwards configuration on it's doors. The
striker pins are mounted on the doors, and the latches are hidden
INSIDE THE BODY! So, to open the doors, you don't pull a handle. You
instead press a button, that in turn activates a solenoid, and pulls
the latch for you, to open the doors. This applies to both inside
the car, as well as outside. The way that the C6 locks it's doors to
prevent theft is that IT DISABLES THE OPEN DOOR BUTTONS!
Now that sounds like an innovative idea on the surface, doesn't it?
Hide the door locks inside of the car body, so theives can't jimmy
the locks. Plan B incase your batter dies, is that you can open the
rear hatch glass with your key, and tug on an emergency cable to
physically open the drivers door. It's all the way in the back of
the *luxurious* felt-lined trunk, next to the fuel release.
Yeah, that's nice and all, but what happens if I'm in a severe
accident, where the wiring harness to the doors is severed, and I
get trapped inside a burning car where I die in an inferno? What if
I get trapped in rising flood water, or drive into a flooded ditch
or river, and water FUBARS my entire electrical system, and I drown
because I can't get out? What if I'm in the car, and the fickin'
alarm goes off, and I get trapped inside?!?! Which is exactly what
happened to me!
Now, I'm a big guy, admittedly. But I'm also limber. I've never had
a problem sliding over the center console between seats in my
DeLorean. However, in the Corvette, I was totally trapped. My first
instinct being a DeLorean guy trapped in a car is to raise up, and
kick the glass out. However, the Corvette had me so trapped, I
couldn't get my knee past the steering wheel. Not even the power,
telescopic steering colum worked any longer. Everything was
disabled, including those damn door-open buttons! And the cockpit
inside the Vette was so tight, I couldn't even raise my legs up. So
there was no way I could reach that emergency release that was all
the way in the trunk. After the alarm blared, and I started punching
and slamming the car door, the GM guy finally took notice, and
disabled the alarm, so that I could get out. Now incase you're
wondering, yes, the Corvette locks it's doors with the factory
alarm. I couldn't get out from the inside, and my buddy on the
outside couldn't do it either. This was at one of those GM test
track events, BTW. Not a car dealership.
I've seen Gullwing doors on the DeLorean get wedged shut. They just
take a bit more "oomphf" to open. And when the locks do jamm,
they're also easy to open. But no matter what, they're not as great
a risk to my safety, as the Corvette C6 is. Hell, even the Bricklin
SV-1 had emergency cotterpins above your head that you could pull
out, to get the doors open, incase the hydraulic system failed!
I won't ride in a C6, nor the Cadillac XLR it was badge-engineered
from for an honest fear of my life. I don't trust that crap door
lock design in the least bit if something happened. And knowing GM's
penchant for defective designs, and numerous recalls, I doubt I'd
have to even be in a serious accident for something to go wrong. But
that's just my opinion.
-Robert
vin 6585 "X"
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