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Fasglas
01-31-2016, 12:17pm
Like Roseanne Rosannadanna used to say, "It's always somthin'"


Corvette ZR1 owner calls 911 after locking himself in car (http://jalopnik.com/5791811/corvette-zr1-owner-calls-911-after-locking-himself-in-car)

Corvette ZR1 owner calls 911 after locking himself in car

Lee Adams of central Florida owns 14 high-end sports cars, including a Ferrari, Mosler, Ariel Atom and a Corvette ZR1. Or he used to own a ZR1, until he had to call 911 after getting locked inside.

Adams told the FerrariChat forums of his woes at the hands of General Motors' tricky machine interface engineering:

I closed the door and the door locked and would not open. The car would not start. I was trapped!

I called 911 and the police came quickly thankfully. Once the officer assured himself that ilt was a car problem and not a idiot driver problem. He nor I could not figure out what to do.

He called the chevy dealership. They recommended I get out of the seat and crawl to the back of the ZR1 and pull the emergency tag. It is not a pretty sight to see a fat, 65 yr old man crawling to the back of the car. Well I did and the trunk opened.

That was this morning and the ZR1 is sold, gone out of my life. Took it to the dealer that helped me and sold it cold and flat. It is still in my garage I am not going near it. They will have to come to my home and get it out of my garage.

Thank god for the police and the chevy dealer. Boo for GM.

What a stupid system to put onto a car. Just think , if my garage door was closed not open and I did not have a cell phone and my wife just left for Vermont It could have been alot worse.

No more cars for me with automatic door lock systems. FYI the officer said his captain had the same problem with his Corvette.

Now, let's unpack this a bit:

Adams, a retired executive, owns enough vehicles that he can't drive them all regularly, and has to keep some of them on battery chargers so they don't run down — which is what happened to the ZR1. Unfortunately for him, not only was he unaware of the manual release switch for the doors located on the floor near the seats and detailed in the Corvette's owner's manual, the Chevy dealer on the phone was also unaware — despite it being a somewhat common problem for Corvette owners.

According to his posts, Adams will fill his empty spot with another GM sports car — namely a high-end Camaro. And it's not as if he's unaccustomed to the quirks of collectible cars, like when your Ferrari 458 blows an oil hose and catches fire.

He also admits he's a little confused by the latest gadgets on his cars:

PS: I probably should not tell the forum, that on some cars I cannot even figure out some of the "gizmos" That is okay the cars perform just as well!

So it's probably best for all involved that Adams focus his attentions on vehicles with fewer hidden switches and a gently used ZR1 find a new home.

mrvette
01-31-2016, 12:22pm
WAY too much use of electronics/computers in modern cars.......A speed density DPFI works as well as the rest of this crap, it's silly.....
for instance, my convertible has NO LOCKS, the doors can not be locked!!!!

why bother??

Craig
01-31-2016, 12:23pm
There's a similar, circular problem with the Porsche 996s. There's an option for an electric (vs. cable) hood latch. Problem is, if the battery dies (it's under the hood of course), you can't open the hood to get to the battery to jump it or preplace it.

mrvette
01-31-2016, 1:21pm
There's a similar, circular problem with the Porsche 996s. There's an option for an electric (vs. cable) hood latch. Problem is, if the battery dies (it's under the hood of course), you can't open the hood to get to the battery to jump it or preplace it.

YGTBFKM NO ONE is that stupid, R they??? :issues::rofl::rofl::cert:

stingraymyway
01-31-2016, 2:17pm
Idiot.:shots:

ZipZap
01-31-2016, 2:20pm
No side release on the ZR1?

CertInsaneC5
01-31-2016, 2:25pm
No side release on the ZR1?

Yes. He did not read the owners manual. Big surprise there. :slap:

Tire Fryer
01-31-2016, 3:05pm
There's a similar, circular problem with the Porsche 996s. There's an option for an electric (vs. cable) hood latch. Problem is, if the battery dies (it's under the hood of course), you can't open the hood to get to the battery to jump it or preplace it.

The 996 has a spot in the fuse box where power can be applied via jumper cables to open the hood if the car is equipped with an electric bonnet release, so they thought about that one.

The most idiotic oversight I've seen is the newer Bentley continental that has no mechanical way of entering the trunk via a key or latch, and the batteries are in the trunk. You have to use a powerful suction cup and pull the tail lamp assembly out to apply power to the circuit and open the trunk.

island14
01-31-2016, 3:19pm
WAY too much use of electronics/computers in modern cars.......A speed density DPFI works as well as the rest of this crap, it's silly.....
for instance, my convertible has NO LOCKS, the doors can not be locked!!!!

why bother??


Didja hear about those guys in Kentucky that drove into a pond with a Chevy Pick Up Tuck?

The two guys inside got out ok by rolling the windows down..

The poor guy riding in the back drowned... :yesnod:





He couldn't figure out how to get the tail gate down.. :(

island14
01-31-2016, 3:22pm
Yes. He did not read the owners manual. Big surprise there. :slap:

I have a bunch of Corvette Owners Manuals FREE on one of my websites..

And I hope to collect them all someday..

Corvette-World - Articles: Free Corvette PDF Download Manuals (http://corvette-world.com/article-category-2-Free-Corvette-PDF-Download-Manuals.html)


PS: If any of you guys here have an owners manual not listed at the link above I would really appreciate a scanned copy of it..

:cert:

ApexOversteer
01-31-2016, 4:31pm
Lee is a really nice guy, and he's got some extremely cool toys. He's a guy that had his head down to the grind stone and when he looked up having earned himself a fortune, he decided to reward himself. He loves cars, but doesn't know a whole lot about them, he just knows what he likes, so he buys it. Yeah, he didn't read the manual, but then Chevy released a car that needs an emergency escape device. Cars shouldn't need emergency escape devices...

onedef92
02-03-2016, 10:02am
And to complicate matters, it's not recommended to keep the batteries on a float or trickle charger anymore, either.

Cybercowboy
02-03-2016, 12:24pm
Lee is a really nice guy, and he's got some extremely cool toys. He's a guy that had his head down to the grind stone and when he looked up having earned himself a fortune, he decided to reward himself. He loves cars, but doesn't know a whole lot about them, he just knows what he likes, so he buys it. Yeah, he didn't read the manual, but then Chevy released a car that needs an emergency escape device. Cars shouldn't need emergency escape devices...

And for the Chevy dealer to not know, and I assume he at least asked someone in the service department, that's just plain unforgivable.

Jobaka
02-03-2016, 12:47pm
And for the Chevy dealer to not know, and I assume he at least asked someone in the service department, that's just plain unforgivable.

:iagree: It's not like this is the first time it's happened. How does the dealer not know?

Dan Dlabay
02-03-2016, 2:59pm
My vette has a door release at the base of each seat and I know they work because I had to use them once. Some people are just clueless.

CORVETTE
02-04-2016, 9:46am
My vette has a door release at the base of each seat. Some people are just clueless.

:iagree: Amazing how some who buy cars, never open the manual