Golf Eos

does the e46 not have emergency roll over bars that pop up should you be involved in an accident?
 
Matblack said:
Very very

I've seen the ones on the Merc SL engage

MB
/impressed.

even so wouldn't you rather put your trust in something static like a beefed up 'A' pillar rather than a device with moving parts+electrical components?
 
The_Dark_Side said:
/impressed.

even so wouldn't you rather put your trust in something static like a beefed up 'A' pillar rather than a device with moving parts+electrical components?

It's still going to have a beefed up 'A' pillar, but the rollover protection is to protect the passengers in the back seats.
 
NickXX said:
It's still going to have a beefed up 'A' pillar, but the rollover protection is to protect the passengers in the back seats.
i'd still prefer a fixed roll-over bar...although this is much more unsightly.
i can't help but feel if it relies on moving parts and sensors then even a minute percentage of them must fail, and knowing my luck...
 
The_Dark_Side said:
i'd still prefer a fixed roll-over bar...although this is much more unsightly.
i can't help but feel if it relies on moving parts and sensors then even a minute percentage of them must fail, and knowing my luck...

Yeah, but when you get down to stuff like this it gets silly - it's WAY more likely that you'll do something like crash head on into a tree at 50 with the roof up than roll over WITH passengers in the back seat AND have the crash bars fail, so the designers deemed it reasonable just to have the pop-up bars.
 
NickXX said:
Yeah, but when you get down to stuff like this it gets silly - it's WAY more likely that you'll do something like crash head on into a tree at 50 with the roof up than roll over WITH passengers in the back seat AND have the crash bars fail, so the designers deemed it reasonable just to have the pop-up bars.
the Titanic "couldn't" sink so the designers deemed it reasonable to skimp on the number of lifeboats it was equipped with.
it's a safe bet the passengers onboard that night didn't agree it was a good decision.
 
The_Dark_Side said:
the Titanic "couldn't" sink so the designers deemed it reasonable to skimp on the number of lifeboats it was equipped with.
it's a safe bet the passengers onboard that night didn't agree it was a good decision.

I think today's car safety designers are a touch more safety concious than early 20th Century ship builders...
 
The_Dark_Side said:
the Titanic "couldn't" sink so the designers deemed it reasonable to skimp on the number of lifeboats it was equipped with.
it's a safe bet the passengers onboard that night didn't agree it was a good decision.

but who would own a convertible in an ice berg region? :p
 
NickXX said:
I think today's car safety designers are a touch more safety concious than early 20th Century ship builders...
i was likening two uncommon scenarios.
my point was that one or more of these active bars must fail.
nothing that complex can be 100% reliable.
 
The_Dark_Side said:
i was likening two uncommon scenarios.
my point was that one or more of these active bars must fail.
nothing that complex can be 100% reliable.

Another uncommon scenario would be a blow out of a tire on the motorway, at 80mph. That is a lot more common however than a rollbar failing in its time of need.
 
NickXX said:
Another uncommon scenario would be a blow out of a tire on the motorway, at 80mph. That is a lot more common however than a rollbar failing in its time of need.
a failing roll bar would be a much bigger deal than a tyre letting go on the motorway.
 
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