RH1300S wrote:This is the way to go in the future - reduce weight. Less energy is required to achieve the same performance. Smaller tyres required etc. etc.
Lighter cars will have accidents with less energy. Roads full of heavy cars have a lot of energy to dissipate when they do hit each other.
You might argue that it would be quite easy (ish...
)to design a light car with good safety features - giving it good passive safety. Additionally the active safety of a light car is better (less mass to stop/turn in avoidance).
the future is in the past...for decades the buzzword was aerodynamics..not a mention of weight ...until a Golf had reached 1200kilo curb weight thats a cool 505 increase from where the Golf started...thats development at its best...
then we had the Airbag and safety hype ,very good thinking to carry 15 kilos of pyrotechnics in all cars to help save the life of those who actually get involved into an accident where the bag is actually needed.
On a sidenote ,just look beneath the cover of a current passenger car seat or the
hard plastic mouldings of the passenger compartment...i bet if you start the design of components under the aspect of avoiding them doing harm to the passengers you could possibly do away with a lot of these questionable inventions.
light cars... you do not even need a reverse gear for this..
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http://www.stefan-arold.de/pics-fifties ... ittger.jpg