In a perfect world..............Doc
> > For the second time in 6 months or so my wife has stopped the car to
> > pick up the mail, and found herself locked out. Fortunately its
> > happened there, for an extra set of keys is just a quick walk away.
>
> Why is she closing the door with the keys still in the car? That's a bad
> habit to have.
> > For the second time in 6 months or so my wife has stopped the car to
> > pick up the mail, and found herself locked out. Fortunately its
> > happened there, for an extra set of keys is just a quick walk away.
>
> Why is she closing the door with the keys still in the car? That's a bad
> habit to have.
Well - there's lots of times when leaving the keys in the car is perfectly
acceptable. It does not lead to habits.
That said, in my wife's Sonata ('04), if you leave the keys in the ignition
with the engine shut off, the DRL's stay on. You have to remove the keys to
shut them off. You can back them out to a point where the DRL's will shut
off, but at that point they fall out of the switch.

Signature
-Mike-
mmarlowREMOVE@alltel.net
>> For the second time in 6 months or so my wife has stopped the car to
>> pick up the mail, and found herself locked out. Fortunately its
>> happened there, for an extra set of keys is just a quick walk away.
>
> Why is she closing the door with the keys still in the car? That's a bad
> habit to have.
Millions of us do it every day. Do you really think it is necessary to take
the keys out while getting the mail? Clean a bug off the windshield?
Better would be to have it unable to lock with the key in place and not
running, as my Buick does. In 45 years, I've never locked my keys in the
car. OTOH, I never lock my car either.
misterh78 - 04 Jan 2007 15:06 GMT
There have been past posts regarding the speed sensitive autolock
feature on the 06 Sonata's, in that the locks unlock and lock over and
over in a period of a few seconds and suddenly stop.
I also own an 06 Sonata. If I leave the keys in the ignition, with the
engine running, and the drivers door is locked, - when it is closed it
*should* automatically unlock the driver's door. It's *possible* the
speed sensitive autolocks override this feature, but that doesn't make
sense to me whatsoever. Your best bet is to bring it back to the
dealer and insist they look into it.
Brian Nystrom - 05 Jan 2007 11:12 GMT
>>> For the second time in 6 months or so my wife has stopped the car to
>>> pick up the mail, and found herself locked out. Fortunately its
[quoted text clipped - 7 lines]
> running, as my Buick does. In 45 years, I've never locked my keys in the
> car. OTOH, I never lock my car either.
I'm not arguing that automatic door locks are a good thing, in fact, I
can't stand them! If my car had automatic locks I'd find a way to
disable them. My girlfriend's Passat has them and they drive me nuts
when I have to use her car.
It's not necessary to take the keys out of the car, just leave the door
open or roll down a window so you can't lock yourself out. After having
locked myself out a few times over the years, I've learned to avoid
habits that could cause it to happen.