My keys spend much of thier life here. Your method is going to screw me over frequently
No, because there's key in sight. Pay attention. So it is not going to auto-lock. Besides, does your key inside the car mean that you never lock it?
It's easier then that. After last door is closed with engine off, lock the whole thing. Key or no key on sight. You may give it few seconds. I just don't know what for.
I still don't get a point of the key being required to LOCK. Forget unlocking or driving off with no key.
Close your trunk/boot. Do whatever else you need. But if there is no key around, and all doors are closed, the car must be shut.
Ok, I guess our car is slightly different. So why do you have to get to the driver's door to get it to locked in your case? You do whatever you have to at the trunk or rear door. Then you step away. No key in sight, and the car does what? Nothing? Should be locked as soon as you close either door.
It locks as soon as you get to rear door anyway, so this scenario is not applicable. If you have to do your business in the rear seat frequently, the existing design doesn't work anyway.
Besides, in this case you still have your key present, don't you?
So, anything else?
Well, in this case if the vehicle doesn't know what to do and there's nobody around to help, would it not be more logical to lock a hell out of everything, sit tight and pretend you're not a car at all?
Ok, I get the technicalities, I'm electronic engineer by education. I'm jus wonder why. Why the signal from the key is necessary to make a lock decision?
So, I'd ask this again, can anyone produce a use case for the above scenario? When the car does not lock itself if there is no key in range when the door closes? Why would the key be involved in auto-LOCKING the doors?
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Not if there is second key present, especially if it has just being used to unlock all doors. In this case it should leave everything as is- neither lock, nor unlock, as it does. But to give warning like that is unnecessary. The usual unlock beep is just fine.