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Originally Posted by samaspire But here it looks...the impact speed would have reduced to less than the threshold for Airbag deployment. |
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Originally Posted by ajmat The chassis might not receive a direct impact force but was probably bent due to the body distortion. |
Sam and Ajeet, let us for once put all the science, engineering and logic behind and discuss a very simple aspect. I, you and everyone else here on this wonderful forum drives on the roads. Here are the pics of a Yeti from this very same forum which had met with a 'minor' accident.
Just look at the pics of Fortuner and the Yeti and simply tell me, w
hich car anyone here in this forum would want to be into in case of a crash of same magnitude as of Fortuner?
My vote goes for Yeti, because insurance will cover that extra cost even if the airbags are deployed when not required to, but having them not deploy even when required is what I won't want to afford.
Yeti in question:
Member VBN's car Source: http://www.team-bhp.com/forum/test-d...ml#post2798559 Quote:
Originally Posted by Acharya Toyota better explain this |
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Originally Posted by Acharya If the speed was high enough to bend the metal bar of frame, then the impact should result in airbag deployment.
No two ways about it. |
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Originally Posted by smartcat recall and fix the problem if it exists. |
Same are my thoughts, the safety components like tyres, airbags, brakes etc don't require any kind of explanations if they fail in spite of being properly maintained. IF a car has hit anything strong enough that the impact force has reached the cabin - the airbags should deploy; they can make a difference between life and death after all and people pay for life saver technologies because they ARE expected to work they way they are supposed to.
As we can see in this image, the steering column of the car is collapsed (It is collapsible after all - for crash protection), by no ways it is acceptable that the airbags didn't deploy here.
Toyota is definitely answerable in this case at least!
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Originally Posted by for_cars1 There is a reason why cars like VWs, Mercs, BMWs are structurally strong with crumple zones et-all yet are built heavy. Its not that they don't have the expertise to build flyweight yet strong cars. |
Indeed, the crumple zone is something that is supposed to crumple in case of a crash and dissipate a lot of kinetic energy - simple! But, they are not supposed to be made of paper that they will simply crumple - they have to be strong enough to crumple only when the impact is actually strong enough which they should actually 'absorb' giving the required deceleration and energy dissipation.
Simple, if you have a 2 tonne load coming down an elevator - the springs at the base will be the ones which can handle that load - not the springs of namesake which will simply depress themselves to the full even if the elevator is empty and made to rest on them.
In other words, either the Maruti R&D is too smart or the R&D engineers in the companies which have higher R&D spending than probably the entire value of Maruti itself, are fools.
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Originally Posted by shaktisarangi Maruti has wilfully ignored the safety of Indian customers. |
You are talking about the same company whose head wants the BNVSAP tests to be conducted at a speed of 20 km/hr.
This statement itself says everything about how much they actually value the safety. They saw that people have started demanding ABS and airbags - they happily gave it - not for safety, but for addressing the new demand in the market.
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The Indian customer unfortunately does not understand the concept of safety and is more than happy shelling out money a Maruti car due to mileage and resale values.
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- Nimbu - mirchi is the biggest safety
- "Don't talk about accidents, we will not meet one - our God is in the car"
- "Buy on right date and time as per pandit ji, it will never crash"
- "Put those black threads type things on the frotn and rear bumper (Yes, that ugly one), no evil eye - full safety"
This way safety is taken care by these things, rest is mileage and resale which the Maruti car delivers.
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Originally Posted by mayanksabharwal New Dzire after colliding with a tempo. There is no damage to the tempo. |
Those are crumple zones at work. don't you know? The car has crumpled protecting the occupants. No matter if the bumper of the truck even reaches the dashboard and hits directly the passenger, crumple zones are still working.
