• @[email protected]
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    621 month ago

    She’s a moron. Normally when you open the door, the windows will slide down a half inch so they can clear the weather stripping as the door opens.

    The emergency release just opens the door so the window will kind of drag through the weather stripping. I guess if you do this enough, it could damage the rubber seal. The car will warn you about it if you open the door that way, but by no means is it worth sweating to death in a car to avoid.

    • Hildegarde
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      591 month ago

      The one time I rode in a tesla, the car showed an angry message on the center screen because I opened the door with the door handle and that was wrong somehow. Apparently there’s a secret second door handle that doesn’t damage the weatherstripping.

      Most car manufacturers have this figured out, they quite cleverly make the normal door handle and the manual release be the same handle.

      • stankmut
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        451 month ago

        It’s not a secret door handle, it’s a button with a picture of an open car door on it . The problem is that the emergency latch is closer to where a normal door handle is, so people looking down for the handle see it first. The button is just a little further forward and a little higher than people expect, so they always miss it.

        It’s still a bad design.

      • @[email protected]
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        -371 month ago

        Different design philosophies. Fewer moving parts, fewer things to break.

        One thing I’ve heard is that Tesla has plans to detect oncoming hazards and not allow the door to open if, say, a car or bicycle is approaching nearby. More difficult if there’s always a physical link between the handle and door latch.

        • @[email protected]
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          421 month ago

          Fewer moving parts, fewer things to break.

          You are talking about a regular door handle, which tends to last for many, many decades without failing, right?

          Electronics are far, far more likely to fail than physical links.

        • Hildegarde
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          161 month ago

          Having one handle to open the door is a better implementation of that philosophy than two entirely separate door opening systems.

          • @[email protected]
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            1 month ago

            How does it work exactly? If you pull normally, it opens electrically, if you pull harder and further then it opens mechanically?

            • @Zink
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              41 month ago

              There could be a sensor that detects the handle being pulled before the handle starts to engage the mechanical release. As soon as the handle has moved the minimum distance (or had the minimum force applied), the windows could move down and the actuator moves the door mechanism before the handle even engages with it.

            • @Tja
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              11 month ago

              Tesla bad, haven’t you gotten the news?

        • @[email protected]
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          131 month ago

          Solenoids have been a thing for actuating door latches since the 50s. As it turns out in the last 70 years most manufacturers realized they were less reliable than the basic mechanical latches used on almost every car.