Man ‘Trapped’ In Car For 14 Hours Right Next To A Manual Door Release

In a classic case of RTFM, a 75-year-old man spent 14 hours trapped inside his Cadillac XLR roadster when the electrics failed, not realising he was just inches from the manual door release lever
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Picture the scene: you unlock your Cadillac XLR roadster with the intention of taking it for a spin on a glorious summer’s day. You unlock it, get in, shut the door and… oh, all the electrics have failed.

The car is electrically dead. The key fob seems to be as well. That’s a mighty slice of bad luck you’re having, says the car; better keep you in here for your own protection.

Man ‘Trapped’ In Car For 14 Hours Right Next To A Manual Door Release

The XLR’s electric doors refused to open for Peter Pyros, leaving him trapped inside a car on a warm day in Cleveland, Ohio. It was some 14 hours later, after the poor old gent had presumably ruined his seats as well as passing out from the heat, that a neighbour found him and called the fire brigade, who jump-started the car and removed Mr Pyros.

However, car makers tend not to make doors without mechanical fail-safes to prevent exactly this sort of thing from happening. The Corvette-based XLR has a fairly visible lever down by the side of the driver’s seat, complete with a picture of an open door on it. Had Mr Pyros looked down, he’d have seen it.

Man ‘Trapped’ In Car For 14 Hours Right Next To A Manual Door Release

The owner’s manual, in which the manual escape lever is described, wasn’t in the car. Mr Pyros is lucky to be alive; a man and his dog both died in 2015 when the same electrical failure blighted a 2007 Corvette in Port Arthur, Texas.

Now Mr Pyros says he wants to sue General Motors over his undoubtedly unpleasant ordeal. If we’re honest, we don’t rate his chances of success. Let this be a lesson to us all: it’s always worth reading the manual. You never know what sort of unexpectedly useful nuggets you’ll pick up.

Sources: Washington Post, USA Today

Comments

PorscheBoi996

I mean, you should know that your car has a manual door release, it’s common sense! But who am i kidding, in the US, way too many people dont understand the concept of “Common Sense”.

09/14/2018 - 14:45 |
4 | 0

As I always say: Common Sense isn’t so common anymore.

09/14/2018 - 16:53 |
6 | 2
Ewan23 (The Scottish guy)

Oh yeah we’re totally ready to design autonomous cars HUMANS CANT EVEN OPEN A BLOODY DOOR HANDLE.

09/14/2018 - 15:21 |
54 | 0
Anonymous

His first mistake was buying an XLR

09/14/2018 - 15:36 |
4 | 2
Anonymous

Is this Florid- wait, Ohio???

09/14/2018 - 15:50 |
10 | 0
Anonymous

In reply to by Anonymous (not verified)

Well, the Paul brothers came from there, so………

09/14/2018 - 21:41 |
6 | 0
CannedRex24

In reply to by Anonymous (not verified)

Ohio- It’s the new Florida!

09/15/2018 - 06:54 |
2 | 0
French Freys

If I couldn’t find a manual door unlock, I’d smash the window. Giving up and accepting death probably wasn’t his best option

09/14/2018 - 16:22 |
8 | 0
ᴶᵘˢᵗᴬᴿᵃⁿᵈᵒá

In reply to by French Freys

Or get the roof off. It’s a roadster right?

09/15/2018 - 01:42 |
2 | 0
Anonymous

Among the Read the Instruction Lesson hides another one…Keep the Owners Manual in the damned Car!

09/14/2018 - 16:50 |
2 | 0
Midwest Hoonigan

He wants to sue even though he didn’t think there would be a manual way to open the door (which is probably mandated by law for occasions like this), and also didn’t have the owner’s manual, on a car that is at least 10 years old? Have fun with that. Just because you’re older doesn’t mean you’re wiser.

09/14/2018 - 17:00 |
2 | 0
Anonymous

It’s an easy thing to miss (if you’re not really looking for it), but i pity the morons who get stuck in a car that has no central-locking

09/14/2018 - 17:20 |
2 | 0
Anonymous

He couldn’t “handle” it 😂

09/14/2018 - 18:16 |
8 | 2
Anonymous

Reading this story gave me flashbacks to trying to reset the oil life on customer cars before the heat got me

09/14/2018 - 18:52 |
4 | 0

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