Scissor doors
Image:Lamborghini Aventador LP 700-4 - Flickr - Alexandre Prévot.jpg|thumb|The Lamborghini Aventador
Image:White_Lamborghini_Countach_5000QV_at_Cars_%26_Coffee,_Irvine,_CA.jpg|thumb|The Lamborghini Countach
Scissor doors are automobile doors that rotate vertically at a fixed hinge at the front of the door, rather than outward as with a conventional door.
History
The first vehicle to feature scissor doors was the 1968 Alfa Romeo Carabo concept car, designed by Marcello Gandini at Bertone. The door style was dictated by Gandini's desire for an innovative design, and by his concern over the car's extremely poor rear visibility. In order to reverse the car, the driver would be able to lift the door and lean his upper body out of the hatch in order to see behind the car. The first production car to feature the doors was a Lamborghini, the Gandini designed Countach; the sports car's wide chassis created similar problems to those found on the Carabo, calling for the unusual door configuration. This sports car was quite impractical for real life, as due to unusual design it was impossible to backup without doors open wide. So, such doors were originally offered as a practical measure that helped the driver. Besides, traditional swing-open doors would make it more difficult to get out of the vehicle due to high door sills. The doors were used on the Countach's successor, the Diablo, on its replacement, the Murciélago, and on a low-production run derivative of the Murciélago called the Reventón. The Revuelto is the latest Lamborghini car to feature these doors. They are trademarked. Having used the exotic door style for several of its cars, the Italian manufacturer has become synonymous with the implementation of scissor doors, which are sometimes colloquially referred to as "Lambo doors".Today many aftermarket companies are specialized in production of scissor door conversion kits for regular production cars that originally come with regular doors. A common scissor door conversion kit includes model specific redesigned door hinges and gas filled shocks. Such kits are usually bolt-on or weld on and require some modifications to front bumpers and door panels. Original door panels are not replaced, so a vehicle looks standard from the outside, when the doors are closed.
Advantages
- Because the doors stay within the car's track throughout their range of movement, they are useful when parking in tight spaces. A gull-wing door style offers similar usability, but the doors swing out from the car's area slightly.
- The hinge is placed in a similar location to a conventional door, so a convertible version of the car is possible with the same door style.
- Reduces the dooring hazard to cyclists.
- Offers the possibility of operating the car with the door open, in a manner that would be difficult or impossible in a car with conventional doors.
Disadvantages
- The cost of manufacturing the door hinge can be more than that of a conventional door.
- The door still impedes access/egress much more than a gullwing and, in some cases, more than a conventional door.
- Door panels typically either have to have lids on any storage pockets, or no storage pockets at all, so that objects don't fall out when the door is opened.
- If the height of the parking lot ceiling is insufficient, a car door may come into contact with it when it opens.
- In the event of a rollover, emergency egress may be more difficult than with conventional doors, or impossible.