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From: aero.spike@mail.com
Simon Parker wrote:
> On 03/11/2025 07:59, Spike wrote:
>> Simon Parker wrote:
>>> On 01/11/2025 10:13, Spike wrote:
>>>> Jeff Layman wrote:
>>>>> On 31/10/2025 10:50, Simon Parker wrote:
>>>>>> I agree with your thoughts on gravel (run off areas on tracks are
larger
>>>>>> than one might think and are in addition to a safety barrier, not
>>>>>> instead of it).
>>>>>>
>>>>>> From memory you mentioned "a largish pond". I do not know your
>>>>>> definition of "largish" but I do not consider 7.5metres to be
"largish"
>>>>>> as ponds go - certainly not around here. :-)
>>>>
>>>>> Nor do I, but we had no idea of how big the front garden the OP
referred
>>>>> to was, other than it was a lawn and pub beer garden. My thought was
>>>>> that if it was too small it wouldn't be effective as it could be missed
>>>>> by the car. I think you're right with around 7.5m, but I would have
>>>>> thought that 2m is too deep. Unless you had an overflow drain at 1m
>>>>> depth, rain would eventually fill it to 2m, and there's a possibility
>>>>> that, as you infer, the car occupants might drown if they were
>>>>> unconscious at that depth. Might that result in some sort of
>>>>> contributory negligence claim if the depth wasn't limited to 1m?
>>>>>> I am more than happy to agree with you on your proposed, seemingly
>>>>>> legal, solution.
>>>>
>>>>> Yes, but this would be in a pub garden. The pond would have to be
>>>>> properly fenced to avoid the hazard of children or inebriated customers
>>>>> falling in, or I can see your litigation colleagues having quite a few
>>>>> lunches there in case something "interesting" happened while they were
>>>>> eating.
>>>>
>>>> It’s interesting to crunch some numbers on the suggested size and
depth of
>>>> the lake that’s intended to restrain a speeding vehicle, namely 7m
diameter
>>>> and 2m deep.
>>>>
>>>> 100mph = ~44m/s. At this speed it will take ~0.16s to travel across the
>>>> lake, and due to gravity will lose ~0.12m in height as it does so.
>>>>
>>>> On this basis the wheels will likely hit the far bank of the lake, the
>>>> water it contains having almost no function in retarding the vehicle’s
>>>> speed, and in these circumstances the lake as suggested is merely a
>>>> landscaping feature.
>>>>
>>>> However, use can be made of the fact that acceleration under gravity is
a
>>>> squared function of the time the vehicle is ’in the air’.
>>>>
>>>> If the lake was 15m across, things are a little better in that the
vehicle
>>>> will drop about 0.6m, possibly not enough to get a significant
proportion
>>>> of the front area of the vehicle into the water to perform the desired
>>>> retardation.
>>>>
>>>> At 22m diameter, the drop would be ~1.25m, very likely to put a
significant
>>>> proportion of the front height of the vehicle into the body of the water
>>>> and so bringing it to a halt. The lake would need to be slightly deeper
>>>> than the drop, to reduce the risk of the wheels supporting the vehicle
and
>>>> so ensuring maximum contact with the water.
>>>>
>>>> Disclaimer: the above calculations assume that g = 10m/s^2 and that
there
>>>> are no other factors operating to slow the vehicle’s progress.
Accurate
>>>> calculations would need to be made for any real-life situation which
would
>>>> need to take into account relevant factors other than the physics in a
>>>> multi-disciplinary approach to finding a suitable solution.
>>>>
>>>> IANAP
>>>
>>> As I've just said to Jeff Layman, my dimensions are for a wedge shaped
>>> structure, 7.5 metres in length, 2 metres deep at the far end, filled to
>>> a depth of 1 metre. (Please note my use of the words "sloped ditch" in
>>> my previous post, which many people seem to have missed.)
>>>
>>> Regards
>>>
>>> S.P.
>>
>> The problem with your wedge design is that its slope is greater (steeper)
>> than the ballistic trajectory of the vehicle once it leaves the
horizontal.
>> It’s a variation of the brow-of-a-bridge phenomenon where a vehicle
arrives
>> fast enough to leave the ground - it’s not that the vehicle is
‘launched’,
>> it is merely the case that the surface, on the other side of the brow,
>> falls away more steeply than gravity can accelerate the vehicle in the
>> vertical direction.
>>
>> The calculations made above show that at 100mph (44m/s) the car will fall
>> only 12cm by the time it crashes into the 1m bank at the far side, some
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