SafeSpeed wrote:
Noob Saibot wrote:
Paul, why do you say
Quote:
the proportion of vehicle KE expended in crashes is almost immeasurably small.
?
Are you referring to the fact that many crashes occur after the vehicle(s) have been braking hard and so lost much of their KE?
Much more. Imagine how much motor vehicle KE in a week must be given up in a planned way (routine slowing for example) compared with that given up in crashes.
And then imagine how much it would be if all drivers shut their eyes for 30 seconds.
We're constantly avoiding crashing...
I do not understand this at all. Maybe I am missing something?
Anyway here is some nice physics for you.....
Think about a motorbike, a car and a truck all hitting exactly the same child at 30MPH. Say the kid weighs 25Kg, the Bike 275Kg (inc rider), the car 1500Kg and the truck 45000Kg. 30Mph is roughly 15M/s so I am going to use 15M/s as the impact speed. For the pedants 15M/s is 33.555MPH, if anybody wants to argue that the diference between 30 and 33.555MPH are going to make much diference then feel free.
Using conservation of momentum we know the total momentum before and after will be the same. The vehicle will be braking but this is not relevant as we are only interested in the absolute instant in which the impact occurs. It does not actually matter if the vehicle is accelerating, braking or remaining at a constant speed.
The bike slows by 1.25M/s or roughly 2.5MPH. Not enough to make the blindest diference. The Kid is still dead.
The car slows by 0.25M/s or 0.5MPH. Not enough to make the blindest diference. The Kid is still dead.
The truck slows by 0.01M/s or 0.02MPH. Not enough to make the blindest diference. The Kid is still dead.
Can we see a pattern in the above? The only way for the Kid to not be dead is to not be hit at 30MPH
Say we assume the childs brain will be accelerated to 30MPH in the distance the head swings and any shock absorbant material in the vehicle. Say 30cm to go from 0-15M/s, thats about 375 M/s or around 40g. Thats going to smart.