Anonymous wrote:OMG. You almost killed your entire family.
Anonymous wrote:Omg. I have a keyless and I regularly forget to turn off the car.
Between radios, kids seatbelts, car doors, etc there are so many buttons to press. Some get forgotten.
I can absolutely see how the OP could do this.
You really don't know until you drive one of these cars.
And why oh why is there NOT a feature that automatically turns off the engine after awhile, with no keys present? A major flaw in the production.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is extremely serious in a garage. I knew a man who died in a townhouse because he left his car on and the carbon monoxide came into the townhouse and killed him in his sleep. Open all your windows.
Nightmarish. His neighbors are lucky that he didn't kill them too.
Anonymous wrote:This is extremely serious in a garage. I knew a man who died in a townhouse because he left his car on and the carbon monoxide came into the townhouse and killed him in his sleep. Open all your windows.
Anonymous wrote:Omg. I have a keyless and I regularly forget to turn off the car.
Between radios, kids seatbelts, car doors, etc there are so many buttons to press. Some get forgotten.
I can absolutely see how the OP could do this.
You really don't know until you drive one of these cars.
And why oh why is there NOT a feature that automatically turns off the engine after awhile, with no keys present? A major flaw in the production.
Anonymous wrote:Read the OP, people. It's a KEYLESS car. Leaving a car running has become a huge problem with keyless cars. A keyfob is required to start the car, but there is no key and it is not required to keep the car running. So, you and your keyfob can go into the house, but if you don't push that stop button in the car, the car stays running until it's out of gas. The NTSB has begged automakers to change the way this works because people have died by forgetting to turn their cars off in the garage.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If you're afraid of this happening again, park outside on your driveway or on the street. Yes it's a pain to have to carry sleeping kids inside and yes you're risking your car being stolen, but it's still way way safer for you.
This. But if you are going to park in your garage I would put a sign on the door, and maybe even an alarm on your phone before bedtime to check.
Anonymous wrote:If you're afraid of this happening again, park outside on your driveway or on the street. Yes it's a pain to have to carry sleeping kids inside and yes you're risking your car being stolen, but it's still way way safer for you.