> I surmise the reason we see it moreso on minivans is because 1) it is particularly difficult to work up enough energy to properly latch a sliding door, due to losses from the 90-degree change in direction at the end, and 2) violently slamming the sliding doors on a minivan is very dangerous to children's fingers.
There is also a third, dumber reason, at least for cargo van slide-doors. The surface area of sliding doors are large. When the door takes that 90 degree turn and moves very fast towards the vehicle, it is pushing a lot of air into the vehicle. The air in the vehicle has nowhere to go, so it acts as an air-spring, slowing down the door. To properly latch the door, you have to really slam it hard. If the windows are down or an other door is open, the sliding doors latches very easily. I thought I was going crazy when my door was closing easily ... sometimes. Some cargo vans even have vents that allow air to escape, but people tend to cover them because they don't know what it's for. But electric sliding doors also solve this problem, by moving slowly and letting the air escape.
TLDR: if you car door doesn't close, open the window :)
There is also a third, dumber reason, at least for cargo van slide-doors. The surface area of sliding doors are large. When the door takes that 90 degree turn and moves very fast towards the vehicle, it is pushing a lot of air into the vehicle. The air in the vehicle has nowhere to go, so it acts as an air-spring, slowing down the door. To properly latch the door, you have to really slam it hard. If the windows are down or an other door is open, the sliding doors latches very easily. I thought I was going crazy when my door was closing easily ... sometimes. Some cargo vans even have vents that allow air to escape, but people tend to cover them because they don't know what it's for. But electric sliding doors also solve this problem, by moving slowly and letting the air escape.
TLDR: if you car door doesn't close, open the window :)