this post was submitted on 08 Dec 2023
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Tesla Cybertruck's stiff structure, sharp design raise safety concerns - experts::The angular design of Tesla's Cybertruck has safety experts concerned that the electric pickup truck's stiff stainless-steel exoskeleton could hurt pedestrians and cyclists.

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[–] Gigan@lemmy.world 14 points 10 months ago (1 children)

Unless I'm mistaken, crumpling is meant to protect the driver and passengers. Not pedestrians, cyclists, or anyone else outside the vehicle.

[–] yamsham@lemm.ee 3 points 10 months ago (1 children)

To an extent it’s both. I mean intent-wise it’s all about the occupants of the car, but as a side effect it also slightly reduces the impact on the pedestrian. The way I would think about it is that crumple zones on their own aren’t nearly enough to protect pedestrians, but removing them would be going completely in the wrong direction

[–] BearOfaTime@lemm.ee 5 points 10 months ago* (last edited 10 months ago)

Crumple zones don't crumple when hitting anything as soft as a person. I had a car run into me while stopped. They were doing about 45, it was the worst-case impact, driver corner to driver corner. My airbags didn't go off. I lost the left front fender and headlight. No crumple zone changes (that's part of the unit body, when it gets bent, it often totals the vehicle). A pedestrian would've bounced off that car with broken bones and a concussion, minimum.

They're for occupants.

Plastic bumpers are the only thing that compresses easily enough to not injure a pedestrian. And even those are pointless, at a speed where a pedestrian impact would compress a bumper, is fast enough to transfer a lot of momentum into a human body, and compress the bumper into the harder parts of the car.