▲ | hinkley a day ago | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
I suspect GP is misremembering why bench seating went away. Bench seats for the driver can lead to steering errors which can result in crashes. | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
▲ | Braxton1980 a day ago | parent [-] | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
There are other reasons too. 1. Cars that offered manual options needed a center console. Japanese imports would always have a manual version, even if that version wasn't in the US. Same with European. The only one alternative is a column manual shifter which is horrible to use. You couldn't use a forward floor shifter unless you want to shift between the legs of the person in the middle. There are dash mounted shifters but would probably hit the middle person's knees. Not sure since these are rare and usually European (fiat multipla) /Japanese 2. At a point a US safety requirement was all front passengers needed either an airbag or a automatic shoulder seatbelt, basically it ran along the door with a motor when the door closed. Automatic shoulder belts were cheaper than airbags so manf usually picked that option but don't work with middle seats since they need a door/column for the rails. 3. Minor, but, additional side safety rules increased door thickness. Both sides pushed in more making it uncomfortable. Fine in rear but front, as you mentioned, is a danger to steering. 4. Smaller import cars due to gas crisis in 70s that US companies (eventually) copied that combined with reason (3) made the middle seat basically useless | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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