Crumple zone Essays

  • Crumple Zones

    686 Words  | 2 Pages

    Introduction Crumple zones are safety features at the front and rear of the modern car that are designed to fold inwards in a crash and absorb the main force of the impact to minimise the risk of serious injury to the vehicle’s occupants. Development Prior to the invention of crumple zones, vehicles were strong and rigid, which during a crash scenario often resulted in serious injury or death. In 1959, a Hungarian-Austrian engineer named Béla Barényi first implemented the design of crumple zones suggesting

  • Essay On Crumple Zone

    621 Words  | 2 Pages

    The crumple zone is an essential part of any car that provides safety for the passengers during collusion with another car or object. Without any form of a crumple zone, passengers would be much more likely to suffer from injury or possibly death. For this same reason, crumple zones have existed in cars for years and are still being improved to this day. One way you can better understand a crumple zone is by creating a scale model. My group and I have made multiple crumple zones with trial and error

  • Crumple Zones Research

    1043 Words  | 3 Pages

    What are crumple zones? Crumple zones are parts of a vehicle that are built with special structures inside them that allow them to crumple and deform in a collision. They are made of fibreglass and steel and are mainly built into the front part and the back part of a vehicle since these are the locations most impacts occur although they can also be put on the sides. Crumple zones were first invented in 1953 by the Mercedes-Benz company and their Mercedes-Benz 220se was the first car that it was used

  • Crumple Zone Lab Report

    1955 Words  | 4 Pages

    Aim: The aim of the experiment is to study and experiment the effect a crumple zone has on a collision. The following experimental investigation regards the effect a crumple zone has on the impact of a collision. How it can be improved and what variables affect its effectiveness. In this experiment it was seen that after the data was recorded, that the most effective crumple zone was the Zigzag shape crumple zone. This was most likely because its shape deforms easily and acts like a spring therefore

  • inertia and car accidents

    617 Words  | 2 Pages

    Exp # 1 Title: Inertia and Car accidents. Aim: To find out how inertia plays a part in accidents. Materials: 1.     Wooden ramp, approx 1.5m long and 30cm wide. 2.     Bricks or wooden blocks 3.     2 dynamics, trolleys or toy cars 4.     Plasticine 5.     metre rule Method: 1.     Two plasticine dummies weighing 20g each were made and placed on the trolleys. 2.     Trolley B was placed 30-40cm in front of the ramp. 3.     Trolley A was placed 100cm from the end of the ramp. Directly in line

  • Crumple Zone Research Paper

    890 Words  | 2 Pages

    Crumple zones are one of the most useful parts of a vehicle. They were invented in 1952 by a Mercedes-Benz engineer Bela Barenyi. The first car that used this safety feature was the Mercedes W111 "Tail Fin" Saloon. This crumple zone was made by redesigning the longitudinal members, with the front lower railing being put in the center of the car to form a safe cage around the passenger side of the vehicle. As well as the front and rear supports being made curved, so that they could easily be distorted

  • physics

    1064 Words  | 3 Pages

    as there are lots of both cars on our roads today. Why are cars like this allowed on the road? I think that physicians sh... ... middle of paper ... ... servility index. The thing is mind when the engineers are designing a car are to have a crumple zone at the front and rear of the car, keeping the steering column from collapsing upon the driver chest and making sure that the vehicle has a strong survival cage around the passengers. These are the three main aspects of what the Motor Vehicle Safety

  • Primary And Secondary Impact In A Car Crash

    764 Words  | 2 Pages

    Modern cars are created with crumple zones, areas of a car that are made to break when the car crashes into something. If you recall from the first paragraph about primary and secondary collisions, crumple zones can minimize the effect of primary collisions by taking the force and putting it into destroying the outside. We tried to mimic this with our design. Styrofoam

  • Essay On Car Safety

    1517 Words  | 4 Pages

    indicate why car safety is important. Governments, car companies, and automobile manufacturers have become more concerned with improving car safety. They have begun including vital safety features such as seat belts, air bags, head restraints, crumple zones etc. to protect us from injuries. All these additional features will indeed raise cost of production, however, their benefits are signific... ... middle of paper ... ... to the increase in car purchase price. According to An Evaluation of Head

  • The Use of Computers on Car Crash-Analysis Programs

    1014 Words  | 3 Pages

    The Use of Computers on Car Crash-Analysis Programs In the world today, computers are used in every field. Be it a major space exploration or a small chore like cleaning our room. The use of computers has made our lives easier but at the same time a computer failure can make our lives miserable too. We trust computers more than we trust anything else these days. We use computers to communicate, share personal information, buy goods online, etc. We also trust computers with our safety.

  • Car Safety

    999 Words  | 2 Pages

    Administration). In an accident seat belts are usually the difference between life or death. The NHTSA estimates that over 7,000 lives could be saved if the victims had used their seat belts. There are also many other safety features of a car, like the airbags, zones, and even padded dashboards. Car safety is very important in our everyday lives, and there needs to be more awareness about the effects of not being safe in a car. The most common safety feature of the car is its seat belt. Unfortunately this is also

  • Seat Belt And Crumple Zones In Cars Save Lives

    622 Words  | 2 Pages

    How Does Seat belts And Crumple Zones In Cars Save Lives? Vehicles are a main necessities of our life, it have been with us for quite a long period; it is time efficient, but the number of death it have caused is not easily avoided; therefore the engineers have designed vehicle safety features such as seat belts and crumple zones regarding the concepts of Newton’s Laws of Motion to help save our lives. The purpose of seat belts is to keep the passengers in the car during a collision, almost as if

  • The 1966 Impala vs. 1996 Impala SS

    694 Words  | 2 Pages

    kinds of safety equipment, emission systems, and a computer to control the entire car. The emission system on the car is approved for 1998 emission standards. The safety equipment on the Impala SS is lap/shoulder seat belts, dual air bags, and crumple zones. The computers on today's new cars control the engine, the fuel injection, the emission systems, the air bags, the transmission, the cooling system, the instrument gauges and all of the warning lights. On the 1996 Impala SS, the options came in

  • The Cold War

    1106 Words  | 3 Pages

    and that caused for more Russian casualties. After WWII After WWII, Germany was divided into four zones and occupied by Britain, France, the United States, and the Soviet Union. Berlin itself was occupied by the western powers; however, it was surrounded by the Soviet zone. Between 1947 and 1948 cooperation between these powers broke down. The west decided to create a separate government in their zones. To prevent this, the Soviet's increasingly harassed the western traffic to and from Berlin. Russia

  • The WNBA - Women's Basketball will Never be the Same

    1034 Words  | 3 Pages

    for me. I continued with the basketball camps, the leagues, and the school teams. I was eventually astonished to learn that there actually existed a Professional Women's basketball league. The only problem was that it was an ocean and a couple time zones away. I did not unders... ... middle of paper ... ...d businesses. There was finally a women's basketball league, but the salary of the league alone could not support its players. The women were out there on the court for fun all over again. But

  • Stellar Evolution

    2295 Words  | 5 Pages

    contain molecular hydrogen (H2) and interstellar dust particles including carbon compounds, silicates, and small impure ice crystals. Also, within these clouds, there are 2 types of zones. There are H I zones, which contain neutral hydrogen and often have a temperature around 100 Kelvin (K), and there are H II zones, which contain ionized hydrogen and have a temperature around 10,000 K. The ionized hydrogen absorbs ultraviolet light from it’s environment and retransmits it as visible and infrared

  • Overfishing Is Destroying the Oceans of the World

    1551 Words  | 4 Pages

    Since nearly the beginning of human history fishing has been an integral part of the culture and survival of coastal communities. These coastal communities and cities have always been some of the most prosperous and successful because of the added resource of the ocean. In the beginning many areas were so densely populated with fish and shellfish that often a day’s worth of food could be caught by simply wading into the shallows. For example, some of the first English settlers to see the Chesapeake

  • The Zone Diet

    3263 Words  | 7 Pages

    The Zone Diet High-protein/ low-carbohydrate diets are nothing new to Americans these days; they seem overwhelmingly to be the most popular among those people trying to lose weight. Ph.D. Dr. Barry Sears’ books on his version of the high-protein diet, the Zone Diet, are among the best selling diet books on the market. The diet seems to be yielding quick and noticeable results to those who follow Dr. Sears’ plan. Many people are desperate to lose weight and have tried numerous methods that have

  • Young Males Take More Voluntary Risks Than Any Other Social Group

    925 Words  | 2 Pages

    so much so he terms this type ‘edgework’. This is a type of voluntary risk-taking which has a strong possibility of serious injury or death. He terms this idea, ‘edgework’ as it is the type of voluntary risk-taking that has a sense of being between zones, almost a sense of liminality of pushing oneself to the absolute limits which in turn instigates a sense of being on the edge between order and chaos. Using this type of definition for voluntary risk-taking Lyng (1990) discovered that most of the participants

  • Analysis Of Toxic By Britney Spears

    1228 Words  | 3 Pages

    Throughout the past few decades, female artists within the music industry have become increasingly sexualised and objectified. As society’s views on women began to change during the early 20th Century, allowing them more freedom, it also brought about an increase of attention and focus within the media. Women were becoming more prominent as artists, actors, singers, and models. By examining a popular music video by the female singer and cultural icon, Britney Spears, I aim to analyse the real intentions