At some point prior to this moment in your life, you likely discovered the windows in the back doors of most cars don’t go down as far as the front ones. Most likely, this realization came at a young age; while your parents or older siblings sat up front, you were exiled to the aft row, forced to decide between staring at the back of the seat in front of you or risk car sickness by gazing out the side. In hopes of nipping the latter in the bud, you might well have tried to roll down your window and pop your arm on the sill, the way all those adults do…
…only to find the window only goes down part of the way.
Given a child’s inquisitive nature, you may well have asked those bigger, more experienced humans in the front seats why their windows open up so much more than yours do. Perhaps they offered up a simple “I don’t know,” or maybe they just pretended not to hear you. But there’s a fairly decent chance they offered up some sort of explanation along the lines of: “Well, that’s so you don’t fall out of the car.”
If so, well, I have some tough news for you: you were misinformed.
At face value, of course, the idea that a car’s rear windows are designed to only slide down so far in order to keep kids safe seems to make sense. Children, of course, are rambunctious creatures, second only to cats in their ability to create chaos out of order; the idea of one slipping out of their seat belt and accidentally falling out of an open window at 75 mph feels both horrifying and realistic. Why wouldn’t carmakers try and prevent such an occurrence with a simple fix?
Think about it for a moment, however, and that idea falls apart. After all, most rear windows still go down more than far enough to allow a child to squirt through. (They might be effective against adults, but if you have a problem with grown-ups trying to squeeze out of your car while it’s moving, the FBI might like to have a word with you.) And cars have other, even more effective means of keeping children from escaping the back seat: specifically, window lockout switches that give the driver complete control over the aft glass and child locks that disables back seat occupants’ door handles, much like in a cop car.