Yes, l can solve the problem with the door. But FCTA, that highly dangerous feature is not circumventable ...
Yes, clearly, that would work. But, when I am playing musical cars on our driveway (moving cars for access and for charging), repeatedly getting in and out of each car several times as I move each of them just a few feet at 0.5 mph, I was just wondering if it was possible to do this without fully closing the driver door every single time.
This sounds like a situation where a minor user error (failing to recognize that a vehicle was not correctly shifted to "Park") could lead to significant operator injury or property damage, so some kind of safety interlock would be more useful there.
Can you elaborate a bit on this? If I am in the seat and moving the car 3 feet at, say, 0.5mph, and then I am done and then I put the car in park, when would the user error kick in regarding have the driver door not 100% fully closed while I was moving the car 3 feet?
But your post right above never mentions the door, only placing the car in park and not recognizing that. Which is not at all my situation. So l do not follow.
Their post was quoting yours about driving with the door partially open and switching between cars. It is a situation in which user errors(not shifting into park was just one example) become more likely. Specially if the user finds fully closing the door to onerous. People have gotten hurt and killed doing what you are doing. Toyota doesn't want to be sued because someone drove with a door open. Thus the auto braking while moving with door open, which isn't going to be something they'll leave to be user selectable, cause of that whole not being sued thing.
This is interesting and I want to understand this. But I am still confused, how does driving 3 feet on a driveway with the driver door closed (but not 100% fully latched) cause other errors regarding shifting into 'Park'? Because, after I finish moving a car, I shift into Park, set the parking brake, and turn off the car. I am not a stuntman jumping from one moving car to another moving car. I understand the safety feature of the parking brake being auto engaged while moving a car if a door is not fully closed, but I was wondering if this feature could be easily disengaged. Because a few of toyota's safety features are user selectable, so I was wondering if this one was. Unfortunately, the most hazardous feature on the gen5 is FCTA and that is not user selectable (you can turn it off, but it turns on again the next time you drive the car). And that feature is extremely dangerous, since it produces entirely spurious warnings and it takes the driver's attention away from driving the car as the driver is forced to look inside of the car to figure out the who/what/why of the spurious warning at exactly the moment that the driver is executing a potentially very dangerous maneuver (driving/merging into moving traffic).
"After Yelchin failed to arrive at a rehearsal on June 18, 2016, he was found by friends at around 1:10 a.m. on June 19, 2016,[36] pinned between his Jeep Grand Cherokee and a brick pillar gate post outside his house in Studio City, Los Angeles, dead from a freak accident.[37][38] As Yelchin got out of his car and went to check his locked gate for mail, the vehicle apparently rolled back down his driveway, which was on a steep incline, and trapped him against the pillar and a security fence. Yelchin was pronounced dead at age 27 at the scene;[39] the Los Angeles County Coroner's office identified the cause of death as "blunt traumatic asphyxia" and stated that there were "no obvious suspicious circumstances involved".[40][41]" Anton Yelchin - Wikipedia He wasn't performing stunts either. Just doing a simple task he has probably done thousands of times, yet in this instance made a mistake that ended his life. As has been the case with many more people. The fact that you'd rather defeat a safety feature than simply close the door all the way can be evidence that such an error is more likely in your future. Not fully closing the door is taking a short cut, and short cuts leads to higher risks.
I think that now I get it. The auto parking brake engage feature that annoys me while I am moving the car also keeps the car from rolling when no one is in the car? Our driveway is flat, but now I am curious if this is indeed the case. I will do a test on a slope and see if this safety feature stops the car when no one is pressing on the accelerator pedal and see if if it stops the car. In any case, this is the first car that I have had with this feature. Every single other car that I have had in many decades of driving (with zero accidents) has never automatically set the parking brake while I was inside the car, while I was in the driver seat, while I was pressing on the accelerator pedal to move the car (even if the driver door was closed but was not 100% fully latched). I am not seeking short cuts, but numerous car reviewers have mentioned the simply crazy number of alerts, warnings, and "safety messages" that the gen5 generates. Safety is an excellent approach to driving and to life, but some of these features do not increase safety. Instead, they harm safety.