Soldato
- Joined
- 19 Oct 2002
- Posts
- 18,143
- Location
- Shakespeare’s County
No room for crumple zones and the like. Another reason why it should stay in town pottering along.
Do engines crumple then?
No room for crumple zones and the like. Another reason why it should stay in town pottering along.
Do engines crumple then?
Sorry, yes I must be wrong in my opinion. A shoe box with a sewing machine engine (they should write Singer down the side of the door panel) is going to be super economical at 70-80mph on the motorway, and of course, perfectly safe as well. I know they are good for their class, compared to say an old Mini that size, but they would not be a car I would feel safe in myself.most un-informed post i've seen on here for a while, made of assumptions by an idiot
Sorry, yes I must be wrong in my opinion. A shoe box with a sewing machine engine (they should write Singer down the side of the door panel) is going to be super economical at 70-80mph on the motorway,
The Smart Fortwo scores considerably better than your Fiesta in the NCAP tests, perhaps you should think twice before pottering down a motorway in it?![]()
Someone mentions a youtube video and it's enough to make you think again about your opinion as posted in post#51?That does surprise me to be honest. I guess it must be made of some new space-craft grade material then...maybe that's why they are so expensive for what they are.
'99 model Audi A4 (3* encap for adult passenger occupant) will fair worse in an accident than a 2009 Smart (4* encap for adult passenger occupant).If you get hit or hit something in either of those you are far more likely to die than you would if you had a bit more metal around you, it's not an ill informed assumption by Duke, or anyone else, it's a blantent fact, just look at it.
If that were true, how did they acheive a 4* rating for the car?Actually the frame of the smart car is strong and rigid. Just youtube it. The problem is that the car is so rigid the trauma of the crash would kill the occupants rather than being crushed.
Incorrect.No room for crumple zones and the like. Another reason why it should stay in town pottering along.
Someone mentions a youtube video and it's enough to make you think again about your opinion as posted in post#51?
You've never been in, or driven, a Smart.....have you?
In the motors forum, of all places, you're expected to be sure of something you're claiming to be a fact. "I think.....etc etc" is one thing, but "It know....etc etc" is another.It's an internet forum, and it's not something anyone has a particular reason to lie about, nor is something I really care about enough to bother checking it out. So yea, why not, maybe he's right, maybe he isn't ...doesn't really matter. It's not a theory I am planning to test anyway.
Prepare to be underwhelmed.I have actually been in a Smart as a passenger, I have never driven one though no.
In the motors forum, of all places, you're expected to be sure of something you're claiming to be a fact. "I think.....etc etc" is one thing, but "It know....etc etc" is another.
Prepare to be underwhelmed.
But then they're neither aimed at, or bought by, anyone who has a love of driving so it makes no difference.
I thought the video summed it up well. The chap said that it did a good job, but not as good a job as a bigger car and the violent rebound showed that.
Anyway, I'm not a massive safety freak and we've gone a bit off topic here. Regardless of weather it is as strong as an ox or as weak as a wet paper towel doesn't change the fact that 60 miles a day in it will be a chore.
Plus it's a shame you didn't put as much effort into your original post as you did in the most recent one![]()
[TW]Fox;13768664 said:I thought the Smart used a Tridion Safety Cell instead of Crumple Zones due to its size?
I think you are taking me out of context slightly.