Are You Too Short for Your Car? Most Autos Are Designed with the Tall in Mind
While Some Laugh Off the Height Issue with Cars, There Are Safety Concerns
It's understandable why automobile manufacturers lean toward the taller car buyer, too. From a practical engineering standpoint, it's easier to correct the problems from having too much room than it is to do something about an issue that arises from too little room. For example, the thinking is that the shorter driver can use cushions or other devices to try to get closer to the foot pedals, while a very tall person probably can't just opt to stick his head out the window because it won't clear the roof.
Yet the practical reality is that the methods most drivers use to compensate for their lack of stature aren't always all that safe or that helpful. Cushions slip; they also require constant adjustment. While you can move the seat to get closer to the pedals, you can also end up knocking your knees on the underside of the steering wheel. You can also get leg cramps from some of the maneuvers, as well.
Some ingenious folks have tried to invent solutions, like rigging little devices to help them access the foot pedals. But not all of these are engineered well. For example, a mechanic once rigged a cheap little extension on my brake pedal for me so I could reach the pedal. The problem was that when the extension broke, a part got wedged temporarily under the accelerator pedal and it was murder trying to get the car to stop while the gas pedal was stuck at full bore.
Manufacturers and even some third-party companies offer authorized foot pedal extensions that can be installed to bring a pedal much more in reach for the shorter driver. But these devices are hardly cheap. One - when you may require at least three on a manual transmission car - can run as high as $150, and you also usually have to pay for the labor. On some models, these devices can be installed in minutes; others are trickier and could cost you up to an hour of mechanical labor or anywhere from $35-75 or more.
Yet just reaching the pedals is not the only problem. Air bags, for example, can pose a safety hazard to not just children but anyone under a certain height. A smaller person may be affected more by the explosive-style release of an air bag during a crash, and these injuries may be serious enough to rival some of those sustained where no air bag is present. This often makes shorter drivers worry about whether they should even own or ride in a car with air bags that can deploy, although removal of these air bags is often made difficult by safety regulations and cost.
See my other Associated Content articles to see what you can do about your car air bag if you have concerns.
Published by Kate J. Chase
Kate J. Chase is a journalist, columnist, and has written, co-authored, and edited more than three dozen books, dozens of magazine and newspaper articles and features, and hundreds of online reviews, how-to... View profile
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- Pedal extensions are available, but they are not cheap.
- While many use cushions to help them reach pedals, cushions can slip.
- Car manufacturers often seem more concerned with taller drivers than shorter ones.




6 Comments
Post a CommentYou mentioned that a flimsy pedal extension device got caught under your gas pedal and put your car at full bore. But full bore is when the pedal is down, not up. Did this really happen or are you using a scare tactic?
This was like the first 1/2 of an article. You presented the problem, but offered no solutions.
What is a good solution though? I am under 5 ft but have long legs so I wind up with my knees in the steering wheel. Cushions not only slip but after driving for a while they sink down from my weight. Anyone have any ideas?
I could not agree more. I'm trying to replace my car and the problem seems worse than ever before, with current trends in vehicle design. I have tried cars where if I lower the seat enough to rest my heel on the floor, I can't see very well out of the front and/or sides and/or rear; if I raise the seat so I can see, I can't drive for any length of time in comfort; where headrests push my head so far forward it makes my neck ache; where the mirrors have big blind spots however I adjust them; where the edge of the seat digs into the back of my knees. I'm 5' 1" and my 15-year old car is fine, as was every other car I have had in the last 30 years. The current model of the same car is impossible for me to drive any distance in comfort. I'm beginning to despair of finding a car which is big enough to have a presence on the motorway and which I can drive in comfort and safely.
I've seen how useful the pedal extension is (the KOMO one) with my own eyes. Better get one before your airbag blows your face off.
Being short myself I totally relate to the problem. My friends tease me because I have to move so close to the dashboard to reach the pedals. I drive a pickup truck and am a little less fearful of the airbag, but I do think about it once in a while. I appreciate your mentioning the problems us petite ones have to deal with in order to drive our vehicles. Thanks