Sabres2Sabres wrote:
I don't know if I'd call new cars stronger, per se, but they're definitely going to behave better in a crash. The old car is bigger, but it has no crumple zone - what you see here is still going to happen, the cabin is still going to get obliterated. The new car is going to absorb the impact more and crumple, resulting in less damage to the cabin, giving the driver a much better chance of surviving.
Both cars were hit in the same area...left (driver's) side, probably indicative of what most head-on collisions would be like. I'd imagine being straight head-on would have similar results...the new car would crumple and absorb the impact, the old car would be torn apart by it.
Not to belabor the point. But, my point is not to argue - I'm just pointing out that a "bubble" of formed sheet metal that hangs off the edge of the chassis, for decorative purposes and in no way has any structural relevence is obviously going to take a beating and (in this instance) serve to deflect the glancing blow (unfortunately) directly toward the driver's side of the cabin.
If the newer, lighter, smaller car (crumple zones and all) struck the older, more poorly engineered, non-absorbant frame
directly?...Hey. We're talking about sheer mass.
I wouldn't pit a Honda Civic against a full-sized Escalade, no matter what the year or the features.
A Formula 1 car has great "crumple zones" that ensure driver-survival, but I still wouldn't put it up against a FedEx delivery truck with a full load.
Those two cars hit "square" and the new car submarines under the '59, with the driver getting a (half) ton of V8 in his lap...
This was a creative display to highlight the virtues of a very specific set of features. That's all I'm saying.