Quote:
SafeSpeed wrote:
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...
Quote:
I do not understand this at all. Maybe I am missing something?
If I understand correctly, what Paul was saying was that, if you take the KE of all the vehicles driving around in any period (say a day), the KE given up in
crashes will be miniscule, as the overwhelming majority of vehicles (we hope) do not crash. Most of the KE is given up voluntarily by braking. What the relevance of this is I'm not quite sure, perhaps an indirect way of making the point that most accidents occur due to errors other than just speed?
Clearly in the car vs pedestrian situation, KE dissipation is not the issue, as the car gives up very little KE. But if you consider a head on car vs car collision, almost all the KE will be dissipated deforming the cars and their occupants. Don't know what the moral of all this is. Just don't crash in the first place I suppose!