greenv8s wrote:
willcove wrote:
you'll see that the nearside chassis rail and step have been massively distorted. The chassis can take all 2.2 tonnes at a point (e.g. cross-axled on a rock) without distortion - so the force must have been massive, which means that the Mercedes must have been travelling massively over the limit.
I don't think you can get a meaningful estimate of impact speeds by that sort of logic.
I beg to differ. If you look at
an arial view (local.live.com), and compare that with
the photo, you can see that the photo was taken at the beginning of the filter lane and at an angle of about roughly 45 degrees to the carriageway. Project that to the verge of the opposite carriageway and you can see that the fire engine is in the driveway of the building over 50 yards from the junction and the Shogun has fetched up 75 yards or more from the junction. So, there must have been enough energy left after mangling the chassis, step, and side of the Shogun to move it bodily over 75 yards in the direction of the carriageway. I don't know the coefficient of friction between mangled Shogun and grass, but I suspect you wouldn't get that damage with that displacement - even if the unmarked car was a two-tonne S-class - from an impact at 70 mph.
Anyone on here with the experience to actually go through the calcs?