I’ve always wondered what the purpose is for those little handles you almost always see in cars, above every window but the driver’s. Looking at it one way, it’s fairly safe to assume that the driver doesn’t need one because the driver should keep both hands on the wheel. But then, when and where, exactly, is the owner of a Nissan Altima or Toyota Camry going to be driving so fast and erratically that his passengers need something to grab on to?
Don’t know if this is the INTENDED purpose, but I always used them for hanging dry cleaning, or otherwise nicer clothes when driving that would wrinkle if folded away in the suitcase.
Those things are great! Getting in and out of today’s cars is worse than a space capsule.
You grab the handle to leverage yourself off the seat and out the door. Plus you can hang on to them and cradle your chin on your upper arm as you lazily watch the scenery pass by – if you’re a passenger, that is.
That’s what I call them. 'Course, it’s more of a “woooooaaaaaaaa-shit” handle.
TR-7s don’t have them, which is a shame considering the 7" ground clearance and the fact that, when sitting, your ass is about 14 inches above the road.
They’re there so some nervous nelly passenger can passive-aggressively comment on your driving, by white-knuckling the damn thing as tho they have to hang on for dear life. Best when combined with the other hand bracing against the dashboard protecting against the imminent impact that never comes.
No, I’m not thinking about anyone in particular. Why do you ask?
Teenaged girls use them while cruising. They get a boy to pull up next to them. They invite him to cop a feel as they drive along. When moves his car close and reaches over, the girl snaps the handcuff on him. The other end is joined by a chain to the “grab handle”. The driver of the girl’s car then accellerates, forcing the boy to do the same. Eventually, the lane in front of the girls will be clear, and there will be another vehicle in the boy’s lane. That’s when the girls speed up…
Well, I used it all the time, when my ex was driving. And hated it when he got a car that didn’t have one. It’s a lot more pleasant to hold onto that when going into a turn at any sort of speed. And he loved doing power turns on twisty mountain roads.
In my one time childhood inncocence I really did think they were for the travelling sales reps who drove about not wanting to wrinkle their suit.
Nowadays I use them for two reasons;
1- The upholstery (sp?) in my Dad’s old Volvo is none too comfortable to rest your arm on during a long journey and,
2- The seats in My Mum’s Renault are genuinely the most unsupportive I’ve ever felt, public transport included. The only thing the driver has to keep him or her in the driver’s seat is the steering wheel. Approach a corner and grab real tight…