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Needs a picture

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Needs a picture. I can't imagine how this works in my mind. Dysprosia 09:30, 6 May 2004 (UTC)[reply]

I put a link to one up ([1]), at least until someone here can get to an auto show and take a picture. I don't go to too many, myself, but I'll take one if I get the chance. -- Djinn112 11:28, May 6, 2004 (UTC)
Also look at the red convertible at Lincoln Continental. Unfortunately the picture I put up at Ford Thunderbird of my '67 suicide-door doesn't really show them. I'll probably shoot some pictures of it specifically for this article. —Morven 01:46, 7 May 2004 (UTC)[reply]
Great, it all makes sense now :) Thanks Dysprosia 09:20, 8 May 2004 (UTC)[reply]

Interesting, never heard the term 'suicide door' before. London taxis have such doors at the back only, so the driver can reach out the window and open the rear doors for the passenger without getting up. Don't know what make or model these cabs are. --Auximines 11:40, 6 May 2004 (UTC)[reply]

Well, the door style is rare these days, so it gets less mention. I seem to remember them being called that sometimes in the UK as well. —Morven 01:46, 7 May 2004 (UTC)[reply]

I reckon the Mazda RX-8 came before the Rolls-Royce Phantom, if we're looking at 21st Century uses of suicide doors.

Suicide Doors

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Its not a "suicide door" because of how it is hinged. It is called that because if you have to jump out of the car in an emergancy the doors would hit you. Dudtz 9/6/05 5:27 PM EST

This Century? Erroneous?

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I always associate the term with 1920's and 30's Dusenbergs and the like. Death might or might not be suicide (e.g. if one were pushed out of the back seat of a moving car with the back door open).

Not named because of the way it's hinged?

But it's the way it's hinged which would cause you to be hit by it if you did fall or jump out of the back seat while the car was moving). True, a similar effect could be gained by exiting the front seat with a front-hinged rear door open, although the impact would in that case tend to close it.

I.e. primarily, I agree with the previous commenter. (commentator?) Except for the "how it is hinged" comment.

An aging online OED doesn't appear to have the term at all (not even in a random citation). A web search finds little, but did suggest that it's more likely that you will fall out of such a car while the door is moving. (If you lean on it, and it starts to open, forces will tend to open it further rather than pushing it back shut, I suppose).

We need a corpus, and earliest citation etc, to see if we can determine who first called them that and determine or infer why.

Alright, I see, looking at the history of the article, that the explanation (originally omitted entirely) here was "perceived danger of door falling open at speed", and changed to its current explanation in August 2005. E.g. http://www.answers.com/topic/suicide-door gives (copies, reproduces) (currently) an earlier version of this Wikipedia article.

To a certain extent, it's always a little suicidal to get out of a door into the road, and many passengers will exit any car's rear seat by shuffling across to the curbside, suicide doors or not.

To another certain extent, derived etymologies cannot be erroneous. People hear "suicide door", look at how it functions, and derive their own reasoning for the term.

To lend substance to the claim that the "falling out", or "being hit by", claims are erroneous, a citation from an early source, perhaps an automobile magazine, must be given in which the author clearly links their use of the term, ideally the original (coining) use, to the worry about the open door obscuring an exiting passenger. (And, true, preventing the passenger from minimizing their encroachment onto the roadway space). But I still say there will be nothing suicidal about the door on the curb side of the car (usually the "passenger side", but not necessarily, depending up on parking regulations).


Unless documented historical proof of the etymology of the term can be found and cited, I think all possible explanations should be mentioned with near equal weight (ie. "others say", rather than "some erroneously claim").--SportWagon way before 22:53, 13 January 2006 (UTC)[reply]

  • I have undertaken to add {{POV check}} to this item, specifically with regard to the sentence
(although some erroneously claim it refers to an increased danger of the door falling open while at speed)
As I said above, the article presents no proof of its etymological claims, and upon reading of Neutral point of view I cannot see how the words "claim" and "erroneously" can be considered to adhere to NPOV. IMHO, changing to "others say" would be sufficient.
That said, I can see that this is a very minor point. My suspicion is that this article has merely been overlooked by any senior members who would feel entitled to rule. My hope is that some such member will agree with my proposed edit, but if someone assertively disagrees I wouldn't wish to invoke any machination to continue the dispute. Had the article not been this way for so long, I would have simply made my proposed edit.--SportWagon 23:07, 13 January 2006 (UTC)[reply]
I've done a little research on this. Here's what I've discovered:
  1. The term "suicide door" refers to any door hinged to the back of the vehicle. This definition was quite ubiquitous and I feel its pretty safe.
  2. If the intent of the disputed sentence is that suicide doors have or had a tendancy to open spontaneously, a little knowledge of physics and aerodynamics is enough to safely slap the "erroneous" label on it. Therefore, if such a claim is made, "erroneous" is not biased. However....
  3. I could find no source at all that said that suicide doors had that tendancy at all. I therefore recommend the entire parenthetical be removed as there's nothing cited to support the claim.
  4. I also found the etymology of "suicide doors" suspect. The origin most often quoted is that if the door became unlatched while the car was in the motion, the door would fly open rather than be forced closed. I quote from The San Diego Reader:
If a door came unlatched, because it was hinged at the back the air moving past the car flung the door open, and passengers often fell out. In crashes the door latches tended to fail, and the backseat passenger would fly out of the vehicle. Hence, the nickname.
So, I pretty much am proposing an entire rewrite of the opening paragraph. In the meantime, I've been bold and switched the NPOV tag to a {{fact check}} -- ShinmaWa(talk) 06:06, 15 January 2006 (UTC)[reply]
Thanks for all that. While the citation might agree with my overall contention that the "others erroneously claim" statement is false, I would put zero stock in it. It is not a citation dating from the time of the origin of the term. (In other words, the current author would say, "Yes, that citation is one of those erroneous claims". It is unlikely that we will find on the internet a citation, with an explanation, of early use of the word. (pre-1940 would be good; one wonders when the notion first appeared that there was something dangerous about these doors, however).
Or do you mean the citation to support the "some erroneously claim"?
Note that the meaning of the word might correctly arise from erroneous assumptions. That is, "The word arose from people's fear, unfounded if one does the proper physics analysis, that air would tear the door wide open if it became unlatched as the car was moving." You seem to think the physics analysis to disprove that is obvious. It is not obvious to me. Perhaps it would be appropriate to briefly explain or cite such analysis in the article.
I dispute your assertion of the meaning of the parenthetical sentence in question. The sentence means to me that people's belief that that is the derivation of the meaning of the word is erroneous. I repeat, it's perfectly possible for a word to be correctly derived from an erroneous belief.--SportWagon 17:07, 16 January 2006 (UTC)[reply]

"People hear "suicide door", look at how it functions, and derive their own reasoning for the term." "I repeat, it's perfectly possible for a word to be correctly derived from an erroneous belief." I think SportWagon is correct. I've come up with a few more, possibly erroneous, dangers below. Unless we get some definitve source on the derivation, I think the article should say that it is named "suicide door" because it is thought to be dangerous, but what possibly dangerous aspect of the door it was named for is not known. Then, the possible dangers of the door should be given along with the likelihood of the situation happening. -- Kjkolb 17:44, 16 January 2006 (UTC)[reply]

My only feedback on this is that we have a citation of a newspaper (San Diego Reader), whose reporters supposedly did the research on our behalf. I think SportWagon might be setting the verifibility bar a mite too high here. To find a citation from the time of origin is overkill and not necessary. Under WP:V, we are not required to fact-check newspapers as they are considered trustworthy enough for citation. For your convienence, here's a quote from this policy:
[Emphasis theirs] One of the keys to writing good encyclopedia articles is to understand that they should refer only to facts, assertions, theories, ideas, claims, opinions, and arguments that have already been published by a reputable publisher. [...] "Verifiability" in this context does not mean that editors are expected to verify whether, for example, the contents of a New York Times article are true. In fact, editors are strongly discouraged from conducting this kind of research, because original research may not be published in Wikipedia. Articles should contain only material that has been published by reputable or credible sources, regardless of whether individual editors view that material as true or false. As counter-intuitive as it may seem, the threshold for inclusion in Wikipedia is verifiability, not truth.
As it is, the current article has NO citations at all. Unless you have a better source or have some convincing reason why we should not trust the San Diego Reader as a trustworthy source, I don't see any reason why we can't leverage the information it provides. I also wholeheartedly disagree with Kjkolb's idea of stating that the etymology of the term is unknown. Saying so is a positive assertion that is counter to citable references. In other words, unless you have a citation from a reputable publisher stating the etymology is unknown, that assertion should not be added, per WP:V. -- ShinmaWa(talk) 22:37, 16 January 2006 (UTC)[reply]
But taken the way you suggest, the newspaper citation contradicts what you asserted as a NPOV use of "erroneous". It says, amongst other things, exactly the "erroneous" claim. Regarding the actual comparative danger of a rear-hinged door opening, after some thought, my non-expert understanding of physics caused me to decide there was no extra danger of it spontaneously coming open if unlatched ("wind force" still keeps it shut), but that if it was pushed open until the point where wind got inside the door, at that point it would have more tendency to fly open than a front-hinged door. But you say we would need to find a published analysis of such. But you also say we can assume your citation as verified. (That citation seems to be from an advice column; I'm not sure myself that they might not have more latitude for unverified opinions than actual news reports; should we attempt to contact that author and ask his sources?)--SportWagon 17:38, 17 January 2006 (UTC)[reply]
There's a big difference between unverified and biased. I still find nothing biased with that statement. It might be inaccurate and unverified, but its not biased. However, on the accuracy front: I have to admit that I was splitting hairs a bit on the difference between the citation and the article. The article seems to refer to the door opening on its own at speed (which is counter to aerodynamics) versus the citation which was specific about the door being unlatched first, either manually or because of a crash. I saw these as two very different assertions even though the difference was subtle. In either case, what we currently have in the article is an uncited assertion. What I'm suggesting is to replace it with a cited assertion, because that is Wikipedia policy. If you want to contact the author and get his sources, more power to you. However, please remember not to violate WP:NOR when you do so.
At any rate, my interest in this article was to resolve the NPOV check that you requested. I'm fairly convinced that I have done so. What you have here is a verifibility issue, not a bias issue. If you'd like to discuss any potential bias further, feel free to contact me on my talk page. Best to you, -- ShinmaWa(talk) 18:13, 17 January 2006 (UTC)[reply]
To find suitable citations for the meaning, I would suggest looking for reports which led to the apparent banning in the late sixties. Note that modern "suicide doors" (e.g. RX-8) are actively held shut by the front door. Edit: Er, sorry, I missed the Rolls Royce Phantom. Perhaps there was never a legal ban, but one would guess there must have been some consumer write-ups at the time which helped cause manufacturers to discontinue them--SportWagon 17:38, 17 January 2006 (UTC)[reply]
I note ShinmaWa makes special note of if the door became unlatched. I would argue that a large number of those "erroneous claimers" would assume that was a necessary condition for the flying open at speed. (Some old-fashioned door-handles might open when leaned-on or accidentally snagged). But I'd say, sure, make that nuance specific.--SportWagon 17:59, 17 January 2006 (UTC)[reply]

Other danger

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The article says that the main danger, or at least the reason for the name, is another car hitting the door while entering or exiting the car. However, a more common danger would seem to be the vehicle moving while someone is getting in or out (by the driver's inattention to a passenger or forgetting to set the parking brake). The person might be dragged along with the car or go under the back wheel.

Aside from getting in or out, it would be more dangerous than a regular door if left open while the vehicle was moving. If a pedestrian was hit with a car door, a regular door would deflect (and tend to not stay wide open in the first place), but a suicide door would hold strong and possibly drag you. -- Kjkolb 11:26, 13 January 2006 (UTC)[reply]


But in a hearse, the passenger in the back is already... dead —Preceding unsigned comment added by 70.113.49.126 (talk) 02:20, 7 August 2009 (UTC)[reply]
If you exit the car, and another car is passing by, that's dangerous anyway. Also, the other car may go from the front, not from the back. - 37.9.29.40 (talk) 13:30, 3 October 2016 (UTC)[reply]

New Mini Clubman

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The New Mini Clubman (see www.motoringfile.com/2005/03/16/the_new_mini_clubman) has suicide rear doors.

Article dated March 3, 2005. --SportWagon 23:56, 18 January 2006 (UTC)[reply]

Second-Order Research

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Here is an online "report of a report"

It claims that "suicide doors" have been banned in Germany since 1961. It also claims the modern versions are required to have some measure of interlock to prevent them from being opened while moving (often implemented by preventing them from being opened before the front doors are opened, which sounds dangerous, but could be no more dangerous than a regular two-door car.--SportWagon 00:08, 19 January 2006 (UTC)[reply]

This has answered the question. I looked up the other cars that are bringing back suicide doors and they also cannot be opened unless the front doors are opened. That indicates that suicide doors are dangerous mainly in motion, which excludes the possibility of the danger being getting in and out of the car and having a vehicle hit the door. Also, there are deadbolts for suicide doors that can be retrofitted to old cars so that they cannot be opened while the car is moving or unless the front doors are opened. I doubt that every car manufacturer is getting the danger wrong, so I suggest that the article be changed.

Stiil, they wouldn't be as safe as regular doors. People might not be able to get out in fire, or get help after being severely injured in a crash, unless the driver is able to open his/her door, and the driver may be killed or incapacitated. Also, if there is no one to open the passenger side front door, someone in the backseat on the passenger side will have to escape through the other door, which will take more time and might be blocked by a dead or incapacitated person on the driver's side. Even if they are able to get out, they may receive more severe burns than they would have otherwise. Not being able to open the doors if the vehicle is moving would be the safest option. However not allowing the rear doors to open may be dangerous as well. For example, if the driver parks the car on a slope and gets out and leaves, a passenger may need to get out if the car starts rolling because the driver didn't leave it in gear and/or set the parking brake. It would be tricky, though. You might want to jump out as far as you can if it's moving faster than a couple miles an hour. This is assuming that the hill is steep or long, or the car could roll into the right of way of fast moving traffic. Otherwise, you would be safer if you just put your seatbelt on. You could try to get the car to stop by climbing into the front seat if you have time, but if you crashed before you get there, you'd be really screwed. -- Kjkolb 02:17, 19 January 2006 (UTC)[reply]

It was the following anonymous revision which first suggested the fear was unfounded. (using the term "quite safe" which is trans-Atlantically ambiguous.)
It was the following two quick successive anonymous revisions which added the "erroneously" claim, and parenthesized the remark.
I really don't see why this second wasn't just treated as a case of (mild)vandalism?
--SportWagon 17:20, 20 January 2006 (UTC)[reply]
I think you should change the article, if you want. I'm working on some other stuff right now, but I might get around to it later. -- Kjkolb 17:41, 20 January 2006 (UTC)[reply]
I won't change it today (on Friday; I have reduced access until Monday...). Next week if it's not done by then. --SportWagon 23:50, 20 January 2006 (UTC)[reply]

Another Anecdote

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I remember my father (born in 1923) explaining to me that the doors used to have hinges in back, and, the door opener handle was a lever. People would rest their arm on the lever, and the door would open. (our car had a levered handle, but not suicide doors). He did not refer to it as a suicide door, but, he did say it was unsafe.

Also, a comment - the "kidnapper door" paragraph is superfluous. It's also poorly written.

Correct: long, long ago there were no arm rests in doors and the inside latch release was the same as the outer latch release: a downward lever. In the 50's this became an upward lever. Nowadays the lever is integral to the door, separate from the armrest. People unfamiliar with classic and/or junk cars wont know this. —Preceding unsigned comment added by 70.113.49.126 (talk) 02:18, 7 August 2009 (UTC)[reply]

Properly (something like) Rear-Hinged Doors

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This is an encyclopedia, not a dictionary. We should be describing the engineering concept, not people's linguistics. The main article should be (something like) "Rear-hinged doors", with a brief mention that they are sometimes called "suicide doors". "Suicide door(s)" should redirect to that.

I will attempt to confirm that vendors avoid the term "suicide door", and perhaps find out how they do refer to them.

--SportWagon 21:10, 26 January 2006 (UTC)[reply]

A Google search for rear-hinged automobile door currently finds lots of matches, including:
  • www.chalkhillmedia.org/Museum (another unsubstantiated definition of suicide door)
  • autos.msn.com; article clearly uses rear-hinged doors in reference to what this article talks about, and does not mention "suicide"
--SportWagon 23:54, 27 January 2006 (UTC)[reply]


I disagree. That's like saying Aspirin should properly be under Acetylsalicylic acid since its more "technically correct". People aren't going to be looking up "rear-hinged door"; they will be looking up the term they've actually heard: "Suicide door". I have no problem with setting up a redirect though. -- ShinmaWa(talk) 07:01, 5 February 2006 (UTC)[reply]

Both of you have good points. It is most commonly known as a suicide door, and it is probably what people will search for most. However, it is a slang term. Rear-hinged door is more neutral and descriptive. I'm leaning towards rear-hinged door, but I would not be opposed to either name, as long as one redirected to the other. -- Kjkolb 08:20, 5 February 2006 (UTC)[reply]

I don't consider it a slang term. It is a popular term, much like "seat belt" is the popular term for "safety restraint" or "safety belt" (the vendors' preferred terms). Vendors, of course, don't like to refer to suicide doors by that name since it is poor marketing. I really don't want to fall prey to marketing political correctness. "Gull-wing doors" are not called "top-hinged doors" and seat belts aren't called "safety restraints" in this encyclopedia. I don't see any reason why this article should be any exception. -- ShinmaWa(talk) 08:35, 5 February 2006 (UTC)[reply]
My Subaru Impreza owner's manual uses "seatbelt(s)" consistently. NPOV is itself a type of political correctness. Avoiding undue negativity can be argued to be political correctness, but in the case of "suicide doors" it's not really evasiveness on the part of the manufacturers/marketers--they really are attempting to avoid invalid connotations. Just because something is contentious doesn't mean it's better than its non-contentious alternative. Citations for "rear-hinged doors" should be easier-to-come-by, and the possible origins of the (not universally known) contentious name can be relegated to a sub-issue. Apart from anything else "kidnapping doors", FWIW, fits in better then. This is an encyclopedia of things, not words/phrases.--SportWagon 18:04, 7 February 2006 (UTC)[reply]
Fine. Let's make this a numbers game. On Google:
  • "Rear-hinged door" and "Rear-hinged doors" - 15,610 hits.
  • "Suicide door" and "suicide doors" - 235,700 hits.
  • "Safety belt" - 2.2 million hits. :)
You are never, ever going to convince me that a term that is over an order of magnitude less previlent is "better" based on some vague notion that an adjective-noun pair is somehow more encyclopedic than the term it is actually known by. -- ShinmaWa(talk) 03:07, 9 February 2006 (UTC)[reply]
To be fair, 'Seat Belt' beats 'Safety Belt' by four-fold on Google by your rules. 68.219.104.145 23:36, 22 June 2006 (UTC)[reply]

Nope! Rear-hinged door redirects here. 99.101.126.114 (talk) 22:48, 30 January 2016 (UTC)[reply]

Of course it does, it's another name for the same thing. The question is which one should be the article and which one the redirect. - SummerPhDv2.0 19:15, 8 January 2017 (UTC)[reply]

Positive aspects

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The article (including the title) currently reads as one long criticism; if these doors are so bad, why are manufacturers putting them on cars again? There must be some positive aspects to them, which the article should mention, even briefly. Do the doors make it easier to get in and out of the car? Are they stylish and popular among a certain crowd? What? (I know nothing about them so I won't modify the article myself; just stumbled onto here.) --ScottAlanHill 21:14, 6 September 2006 (UTC)[reply]


As I understand it one advantage is that someone wearing a dress can turn and get out of the seat more elegantly and with less contortions than is the case with a front-hinged door. There is less chance of a 'knicker flash'.

Hmm...that sounds like another reason not to have them.172.191.28.59 (talk) 08:17, 30 July 2010 (UTC)[reply]

Citation for perception originating the term

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Following the discussion from above, we can find:

http://www.sdreader.com/php/ma_show.php?id=476

This is journalistic, and not really historical. Note that even if the physics totally disprove the theory that the door could fly open, that does not prevent that erroneous perception from being the (correct) derivation of the term. However, the article doesn't currently have a References section, so one would need to be added, and I don't have time to do that this minute.--SportWagon 16:54, 26 March 2007 (UTC)[reply]

Tewrrible contradictory article.

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This article contradicts itself on many points please go back and change it.

01:56, 12 July 2007 (UTC)~


A Little Engineering Lesson

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Of course Suicide Doors are dangerous. That's how they get their name. Its a matter of aerodynamics and engineering. It was not a big deal when cars drove fairly slowly. But when cars are going 60 mph plus, you could be pulled right out of your seat and into the street!

Lets say your door is slightly ajar. You don't realize it until you are at speed. With a normal car its not a problem. You try the handle and push the door out a little and slam it shut. The air passing the car door tends to make the door self closing. The wider you open the door, the harder the air pushes against the door to close it. Case closed.

However, if you have suicide doors its another matter. Say, you notice the door is slightly ajar and you unlatch the door and attempt to open it a little and slam it hard. The problem is, that if you open the door an it opens a little more, the forces are doubled again. Before you know it, your hand is being pulled very hard and you are in danger of being pulled from your seat. You can push someone off balance fairly easily with a 5 or 10 pound push, if they are relaxed, and not strapped in.

As an architect, I used to do some basic wind load calculations. Typically we design buildings for a wind load here of about 15 pounds per square foot, which is the load you get at something like 90 or 100 miles per hour. Something short of a hurricane, but something that can happen in a car without being a race car. Say a door, with glass, is about three and a half feet high and about two feet or so wide if partially open. Thats about seven square feet total. Multiply that by 15 pounds per square foot and you get over 100 pounds of force on a door and thereby your arm trying to pull you out of the car. Granted, most people are not going to open a door two feet at close to a hundred miles an hour. But realize that if the door pulls away from you at first 5 pounds then 10, then 20, then 40, then 100 pounds, within a second or so, you are being pulled in a way that is irresistable. If you let go of a suicide door, you might wreck the door. So you might tend to hold on longer than you should. Potentially very dangerous IMHO. WonderWheeler 05:52, 13 October 2007 (UTC)[reply]

Can you find citations for this? Would the aerodynamic effect not be affected by the door shape? Couldn't a rear-hinged door be pulled shut just as powerfully as a front-hinged, if the airflow is appropriate? (Just asking) --SportWagon 15:39, 17 October 2007 (UTC)[reply]

The rear door could be pulled shut only if the wind came from the opposite direction. Or if a wing of some kind was attached near the front edge of the door, like at a 45 degree angle, such that it would tend to force the door closed. The problem being that it would stick out away from the car to do any good, and would tend to slow the car down. Also, it would only work for a little while, until the area of the wing was less than the area of the door exposed to the wing, then the door would be pulled open of course. Even if the vane was the same size as the door, it would still try to pull open the dorp at some point or the door travel.

Wind acts in two ways, pushing against the door and puling away in suction. The 15 psf figure I mentioned is for just about the worst case, a basic box, with its broadside facing the wind. The force against the face is about 60% or so of the total, the suction is about 40% of the total force on that face. In the specific case of a suicide door, the force on the leading edge (pressure vs suction) may be even greater as the door acts a bit like the edge of a knife trying to cut into the oncoming air. The basic wind speed and loading in pounds per square feet is from the Uniform Building Code, which was published starting in about 1927 in southern california. Its last edition was about 1997, when it was superceeded by the so-caled International Building Code. The 1997 UBC if I remember correctly, has its section on wind loads in chapter 19 or 23. It uses an equation to modify the basic allowable wind load by adding factors that try to take into account the importance of the building, the height above ground and type of terrain, and the existance of special wind areas, like the santa anna winds. Maybe an engineer can contribute an opinion on all this. WonderWheeler 05:24, 27 October 2007 (UTC)[reply]

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This page needs to be edited to show the perceved and proven danger of suicide doors, but also the new advances in car engineering that allow special locks that keep them from popping open at speed. Also the positive benefits of the doors in allowing parents to put child seats easily in rear etc.

Inclosed are some links: regarding a guy that got pulled out by a suicide door as a child: http://www.topix.com/forum/autos/rolls-royce-phantom/TCTUNNQP7IB1VEVR3

A descriptions of special deadbolt type locks for these doors http://www.streetrodstuff.com/Articles/Body/Suicide_Door_Deadbolts/

A recent patent for locking these doors http://www.patentstorm.us/patents/5655800-description.html

Further descriptions of the problem http://automotivemileposts.com/autobrevity/suicidedoors.html

A company that makes novel hinge kits including 180 degree hinges for these doors http://www.aerokits.net/cart/ WonderWheeler 04:21, 3 November 2007 (UTC)[reply]

Dave Shoe comments moved from main page

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Note that "suicide doors" references more than just a class of car with rear mounted door hinges. The 1960s Lincoln and Thunderbird 4-door cars with so-called "suicide doors" were quite safe, compared to early cars which coined the term "suicide doors". You must go back to the early 1930s to find popular American cars which caused numerous accidental deaths due to the door design. Ford, Plymouth, and other cars of the early 1930s offered an optional 2-door car with rear hinge, but these cars also had seats mounted forward of the door hinge, and when one of these rear-hinged door would accidentally pop open, the occupant's first reaction would be to grab the door handle, at which time they would be ejected from the car because there were no seat belts and there was nothing to lean a shoulder against. Rear-hinged doors did not disappear after this issue was recognized by car manufacturers, but the hinges were effectively relocated to move the seats further rearward in the car. When later "suicide door" cars popped a door open, the occupant would still reflexively grab at the door handle, but their shoulder would contact the vehicle body and provide safe leverage to close the door. Much later, cars would interlock the rear "suicide door" with the front door to make it impossible for the rear-hinge door to open without a deliberate opening of the front door, followed by deliberately opening the rear door. No one lost their life over the design of a 1960's era "suicide door". The term "suicide door" has natural appeal, and so it has stuck to rear-hinged doors, but the truly dangerous ones were found only in the powerful V-8 powered cars of the early 1930s. Search "Deuce Coupe" (1932 Ford Coupe) or "3-Window Coupe" to learn more about real "suicide doors". Dave Shoe, Mpls, MN.

(Moved by Alfvaen (talk) 04:57, 17 December 2007 (UTC))[reply]


kidnapping doors?

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not sure if anyone else said this, but ive never heard of that on my life, and i googled it real quick and I only see one refrence to it from a blog... Cherokee40 (talk) 11:20, 12 April 2008 (UTC)[reply]

I've heared it several times. // Liftarn (talk)

American English?

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I don't think I've ever heard 'suicide doors' used as a descriptive term in Britain. It may be used in the custom car and modding worlds, but a lot of American slang and terminology is common there. I know these doors as 'front opening doors', and many British cars were fitted with them before the 1960s.

Is the term used in other English speaking areas? If it is regional, the article should refer to the fact. --80.176.142.11 (talk) 15:20, 20 March 2009 (UTC)[reply]

It's definitely the common term for rear-hinged doors in Australia XQx (talk) 03:50, 13 January 2010 (UTC)[reply]

I'm British and aware of the term. It may be American-English origin, but it's in use in "proper" English. —Preceding unsigned comment added by 195.75.83.25 (talk) 09:44, 7 July 2010 (UTC)[reply]

1957/58 Eldorado Broughm

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The Eldorado had a special half B pillar that the rear door locked to when the car was in gear. It was mechanical, not electric.

Also no mention of hearses, particularly Superior (S&S) conversions. Porque non?

Suggest keeper of the page contact Cadillac and Hearse enthusiasts in SoCal. Anyone coming to an article on Suicide Doors is probably interested in Lincoln Connies and Caddy Hearses. —Preceding unsigned comment added by 70.113.49.126 (talk) 02:12, 7 August 2009 (UTC)[reply]

Studebaker

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http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Studebaker_4-Door_Sedan.jpg

Mrtiller (talk) 23:48, 12 January 2010 (UTC) http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Studebaker_Land_Cruiser —Preceding unsigned comment added by Mrtiller (talkcontribs) 18:11, 13 January 2010 (UTC)[reply]


History Section

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The quote from Dave Brownell seems unnecessary. I doubt gangsters had much influence on car design, they were unlikely to be driving late model cars in the first place. Sofar 2 (talk) 05:20, 18 April 2010 (UTC)[reply]

The influence part is likely true, but they had an awful lot of ill-gotten disposable income to spend on fancy new cars.172.191.28.59 (talk) 08:21, 30 July 2010 (UTC)[reply]

Ford F-150's suicide door

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I think it should be no9ted in the article that the F-150 example is a half door and is only able to be opened when the front door is open as well.216.67.3.61 (talk) 00:25, 19 July 2012 (UTC)[reply]

Modern Use

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Under the image is the caption "A Lincoln concept car reusing classic "suicide door" styling first seen in 1961. Note total lack of B-pillar." There are plenty of examples decades earlier than 1961 of 4-door cars with no B pillar - try e.g. Lancia. Eddaido (talk) 09:51, 20 August 2012 (UTC)[reply]

Modern Use 2

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Most modern UTVs and tractors with cabs use Rear hinged doors. not sure if this applies to the article or not. — Preceding unsigned comment added by 64.235.89.46 (talk) 03:34, 7 October 2015 (UTC)[reply]

Chinese use?

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I've been watching Medical Examiner Dr. Qin, and Li Dabao in that series drives a small two-seater car that only has suicide doors (so no safety interlocks with front facing doors.) I assume it's a normal vehicle for China, and is probably worth a note in the article, but I know little about cars or life in China, so I can't add anything.--Prosfilaes (talk) 14:01, 22 March 2020 (UTC)[reply]

Toyota Tundra clamshell doors

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I changed this on the article - 2003 was the last year Toyota Tundra had clamshell doors instead of 2002. I know because I have one. Also, in this truck, the front door must be opened to open and close the rear door. — Preceding unsigned comment added by 73.3.92.145 (talk) 03:07, 18 April 2020 (UTC)[reply]

Article name could be changed

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"Suicide door" is a slang term and is not universally used; not a good name for the article. Also, the term is used in boldface in the first paragraph, while other names do not appear until the next paragraph. I would suggest renaming the article, and putting all names used in the first paragraph. Best wishes, Pol098 (talk) 12:01, 17 April 2021 (UTC)[reply]

Personal experience

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I see there's been much discussion about the possibility of a door "becoming unlatched". While this is an encyclopaedia and opinions, and experience, count for nothing—sources are needed—I describe an incident that happened in my family (without consequences, due to good fortune rather than any lack of danger): a toddler was in the back seat of a car, next to a front-hinged door (no child seats or rear-seat safety belts at that time). The driver slammed the door from outside, and we travelled. On arrival I went to open the door; to my shock it was not latched and could be pushed open. Fortunately the child didn't lean on it. There are two points here: 1 - a door doesn't have to "become unlatched" in some improbable way, it may simply not be closed properly. 2 - given that the door wasn't latched, it seems reasonable that the airflow helped to prevent it opening more; a rear-hinged door, if it opened a crack, would tend to be blown open. I'd hope that doors latch more reliably these days, and rear seat belts and child seats obviously make a major difference. (Thinking back, I don't remember for sure that the door was front-hinged, though I assume it was.) FWIW. Pol098 (talk) 21:25, 17 April 2021 (UTC)[reply]

Modern vehicles

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At least in Australia suicide doors seem very common in modern vehicles. Is that not the case elsewhere? Many people movers rear doors are suicide doors. 120.21.174.153 (talk) 07:14, 8 March 2023 (UTC)[reply]