Lesson #2,
continued
More Interesting Information on Emergency Deceleration
Controlled High Deceleration
VS a Crashing Impact
Decelerating at 6"g's" is NOT the same as crashing! A crash from
100 MPH into a solid object that results in say a 4 foot of vehicle front
compartment deformation means the passengers inside (if securely
fastened in) also decelerate from 100 MPH to zero MPH
in 4 feet! (Remember the pictures of Princess Diana's
Mercedes - that was about 4 foot of deformation. Can the table below give
you some clues why the body guard survived with grave injuries, while the
others didn't?) Especially keep in mind, however, if the people are NOT
securely fastened in - then they have 100 MPH of stored energy and their
bodies keep traveling until they separately impact
against the inside of the now stopped (smashed) car structure. Do their
bodies now totally decelerate in just 2 inches if they hit solid steel? Or
maybe is it a larger 6 inches if they impact a cushioned dash? The table
below shows the awful consequences of not strapping in and then having to
STOP from full speed in just a couple of inches!
Deceleration Table
This table shows deceleration effects for rapid to near instant stops from
100 MPH, 60 MPH and 30 MPH. ( GREEN
is SAFE , YELLOW
is getting into the INJURY ZONE and
RED is DEAD
). This table is ONLY for a person who has
the full protection of wearing a seat belt with shoulder
harness plus a working air bag - not just a seat belt or seat
belt/shoulder harness combination (which doesn't really keep your head from
snapping forward violently). If nothing else, the table should tell you to
always wear your seatbelt and shoulder harness and if possible own
a modern car with air bags in order to have that non-injury 60 "g"
capability! The designed in crushability of modern cars cannot do you
any good if you are a separate, non-attached object!
Stopping
Distance (feet) |
Required
Average g's from 100 MPH |
Required
Average g's from 60 MPH |
Required
Average g's from 30 MPH |
55.6 |
6.0 |
2.2 |
0.5 |
50 |
6.7 |
2.4 |
0.6 |
40 |
8.4 |
3.0 |
0.8 |
30 |
11.1 |
4.0 |
1.0 |
20 |
16.7 |
6.0 |
1.5 |
10 |
33.4 |
12.0 |
3.0 |
5 |
66.8 |
24.0 |
6.0 |
2 |
167.0 |
60.1 |
15.0 |
1 |
334.0 |
120.2 |
30.1 |
0.5 |
668.0 |
240.5 |
60.1 |
0.333 |
1002.2 |
360.8 |
90.2 |
0.167 |
2004.9 |
721.8 |
180.4 |
(Note: 0.5 foot = 6 inches ; .333 foot =
4 inches; and .167 foot = 2 inches)
Again, the above graph tells you that you have to sprrreadd out the
necessary deceleration over as much distance as possible during a stop! If
it all happens in too short of a distance we now call it a crash instead of
a stop! Not wearing seat belts and counting on an air bag alone to save you
is being lazy and stupid.
The absolute best solution to crash
protection idea I've ever seen was the "Insta-Foam" used in the
Sylvester Stallone, Sandra Bullock movie "Demolition Man".
Stallone crashes his futuristic car and is totally unhurt because he was
entirely encased in Styrofoam - instantly. The perfect protection solution!
(HAH! Only if you can't decelerate at controlled higher
"g's" than rubber on asphalt allows.) Unfortunately, it was just a
cute hypothetical special effect.
Four Foot Stops
The following graph shows the steady deceleration needed to stop in
exactly four feet while moving at any speed between 0 and 100 MPH.
You can see it takes about 21 "g's" if you are going 50 MPH and
about 84 "g's" if you are going 100 MPH. The graph on the previous
page tells us that if you were using the full restraint system with an air
bag that you would be very safe decelerating from 50 MPH in just 4 feet, but
would be in the threshold between bad injury and death if you stopped in 4
feet from 100 MPH. (Note: This has nothing to do with simulating hitting the
brakes as you see you are going to impact a solid concrete wall. This
is hitting the wall without ever slowing down. The front of the car's
structure acts as an energy absorber that collapses
exactly 4 feet before the more or less intact passenger compartment
comes to rest.)
The picture below is a
picture of RACE CAR four point harness restraint system. Note there is even
an extra belt between your legs to keep you from sliding
out from under the restraint system in a hard crash. Can you guess why these
serious belts are so wide compared to what we get in our
automobiles? Can you also guess why we don't use seat belts made out of
1/16th inch diameter high strength steel wire that would be cheaper to make
and could even help lower the price of all cars a bit? Could you also maybe
predict that if your car had such a restraint system (much wider belts with
the extra anti-slideout strap) that the non-injury threshold would
even be higher than the chart values. (MMM? Do race cars contain air bag
systems nowadays? Should they?)
So what
does all of the above have to do with SkyTran
?
1. Using a 6 "g" deceleration mode for emergency stops keeps the
old time train people who are fanatics about their idiotic, non-realistic
laws at bay. Another
nice thing about the above ground SkyTran
vehicles is that they don't require train-like right-of-way gates
systems. Regular trains selfishly consume the time of all automobile
commuters stuck waiting at the gates, while simultaneously causing
unnecessary pollution from idling engines and once the gates go up from the
extra power needed to accelerate the cars back to efficient cruise speeds
.
Also, trains regularly kill
people (especially those too impatient to wait). The last data I
gathered showed 16 killed in Orange County, 32 in Los Angeles County and 13
in San Diego County in 1992.
On October 27, 1997 two sisters aged 3 and 22 months were killed by a 450
ton Metrolink train traveling at 40 MPH. According to the Orange County
Register "The
engineer sounded the horn and executed an emergency stop, but it took 3/4 of
a mile for the train to come to a halt."
Such disgusting deceleration capability in this technological day and age
should not be tolerated! How come the train passengers get the
privilege of 1/8th maximum "g" decelerations to protect them, so
they can safely be walking in the aisles anytime at the expense of the lives
of these two little girls and how many others. Train passengers should
be seat belted in all the time and only allowed to walk around when the
trains are stopped. Then the trains could be reworked to have some
logical braking capability.
More recently, on March 30, 1998, "Train kills man, 29, walking on
tracks". "The
train engineer spotted Castro from a mile away, but could not stop in
time."
2. I had to educate
you, so you won't protest or question why having to wear a seat
belt/shoulder harness every time you ride in a SkyTran
vehicle is essential.
3. Disaster
Safety: One example tells the rest of the story. Imagine a SkyTran
monorail track running along side
a 3 lane freeway. Boom - a 747 falls out of the sky and smashes into the
freeway and the monorail track ahead. Because of the 6"g" braking
capability of the Pods - only a 55.6 feet length of Pods traveling at 100
MPH (one Pod) slides into the inferno before the others can stop, whereas
352 feet of cars traveling at 65 MPH (10.5 cars) can't get stopped before
entering the inferno. (Won't even include trains in this mathematical
scenario - with their severely limited braking capability they all get to
become crispy critters.)
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