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The Pub For General Automotive Related Talk |
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23-02-2011, 10:32 PM | #151 | |||
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A speed change of 150km/h in a couple of ms, unlikely. As I mentioned previously the least acceleration the body could experience in such a crash would be in the order of 250g, totally unsurvivable. Any crash where the driver survives, the acceleration has to be less than this.....much less.. In my limited search of recorded f1 crash data available, the most acceleration any driver survived was 75g, but please if anyone finds data that which exceeds this, please post. Last edited by sudszy; 23-02-2011 at 10:39 PM. |
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23-02-2011, 10:33 PM | #152 | |||
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24-02-2011, 12:29 AM | #153 | |||
Constant annoyance
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exception is when the cow proceeds through the windscreen
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24-02-2011, 08:12 AM | #154 | ||
FF.Com.Au Hardcore
Join Date: Sep 2009
Posts: 2,527
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So a 2 odd tonne 4x4 hitting a cow,well maybe i should be fine
BUT if it was hit with a lesser wieght car (commondore or falcon ???) Or even a corolla or echo ??? It was the big bull bar that took the major impact,and the fact the car was a lot higher (wieght ,height is relevant to crash scenarios isnt it ???) IF the car was any lower i definately would have had a cow as a passenger Even the cops couldnt beleive seeing the size of the beast , the speed and car damage that we didnt get even a scratch My point being, Not all accidents are as cut and dry as a safety test by some desk jockie bofan You can have 2 identical accidents and you wont get 100% identical results |
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24-02-2011, 03:13 PM | #155 | |||
Ich bin ein auslander
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Getting a bit off topic but interesting none the less. As far as I know, John Stapp experienced the highest recorded deceleration forces in USAF harness testing. He experienced a 46.2g stop which involved being braked on a sled from 673.6 km/h to 0 in just 14 m. A similar force, based on my crude calculations, from 150 km/h would require a stopping distance of 3.12 m. Not unbelievable in racing when you consider almost no crash is at a true right angle to the wall, therefore the sudden stop is not experienced in that distance. Please excuse my calculations if the maths is off, night shift last night but it paints a picture. Considering John Stapp came out of that testing with limb fractures, rib fractures and detached retinas, I doubt there is a recorded survival of a peak force of 75g (John Stapp's was just 46.2g).
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24-02-2011, 06:14 PM | #156 | ||||
moderator ford coupe club
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indy cars are made to hit concrete walls at over 300 kph, f1 cars are made to hit them at very high speeds (if i give a figure, i am sure it would be contradicted). all forms of top level motorsport engineer their cars to withstand forces a road car would not. obvious really, when considering that the highest legal speed a road car can do in australia is almost the slowest that any vehicle in the top level of world motorsport achieve |
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24-02-2011, 09:07 PM | #157 | ||||
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http://www.forumula1.net/2007/f1/f1-...data-revealed/, you can argue the case against the crash data recorder if you wish, again it suggests 75g was survived by Kubicas. |
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24-02-2011, 09:29 PM | #158 | |||||
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I realise I am on shaky ground questioning the wisdom of a moderator, however, you responded to my challenge to anyone to list where a car(s) had survived a 150km/h speed change with a solid barrier:http://www.fordforums.com.au/showpos...&postcount=147
and unfortunately the incidences you provided did not support that. In defence, you have built up several strawmen to attack here: Quote:
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24-02-2011, 09:37 PM | #159 | |||
moderator ford coupe club
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24-02-2011, 10:06 PM | #160 | ||
Ich bin ein auslander
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I was only trying to suggest that if we could take some of the tech developed in high level racing (such as F1) and apply it to road car, safety will improve.
Argue as much as you like about technicalities and figures to dispute that, the simple fact is that some of the key developments in road vehicle safety design grew from a competition basis, as did many other developments in vehicle performance and dynamics. That is one of the reasons beyond advertising that manufacturers pour so much of their corporate budget in to motorsport.
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25-02-2011, 04:26 PM | #161 | ||||
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If you compare the regs for f1 cars with what is needed to achieve ratings in the ancap system, then the passenger car standards are generally higher than for F1, especially when you consider the f1 regs can only be achieved with full harness and helmet. There are of course other regs that F1 does better, but basically designing a safe family car and a souped up gokart are different kettles of fish. What features of current f1 cars would you transfer to the family car? carbon fibre passenger cell(expensive), fire extinguishing system, yep good, and ? |
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26-02-2011, 02:13 AM | #162 | |||
Ich bin ein auslander
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Some of the systems that have been used in F1, namely DSC improvements and active suspension. Increase in vehicle dynamics will help avoid crashes, avoidance of the incident is always better than management of the incident. Fire systems, of the 1000's of crashes I have been to, one involved a vehicle fire and all occupants were out and fire service was on scene before it got out of control. I can see the safety budget would be better spent elsewhere.
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