Sounds plausible to me.

Kenneth Waller
http://www.tinyurl.com/272u2f

----- Original Message ----- From: "Doug Franklin" <[email protected]>

Subject: Re: The Calm Photographer


Joseph McAllister wrote:

What I can't fathom is why that car hit the immovable object in the first place. It may have gotten light when it crested the rise, but it was fully down on it's suspension shortly thereafter, and seemingly in control. Perhaps he was trying to start a drift to cross the bridge between the abutments and discovered he had more traction than he could deal with, or didn't crank the wheel enough to break loose.

After viewing it a few times, here's what I think happened.

A) He comes over the hill a little too fast for his suspension setup.

B) When he lands, he compresses the suspension all the way down to the bump stops, and hits the stops pretty hard.

C) When the suspension bottoms out, it's "spring rate" goes from a few hundred pounds per corner to several thousands of pounds per corner.

D) It looks like there's still energy left when the suspension bottoms, so it squishes the tires vertically to "burn up" the rest of the downward energy.

E) This makes the car get a little squirrelly. Just after landing you can see the car "squib" a bit to driver's right (viewer's left).

F) The driver makes a small correction for that movement, turning the car slightly left. The car is really "heavy" (high normal force) for the moment, so the small movement has a comparatively large effect.

G) The car rebounds off the suspension and tires, and loses most of its weight for a moment ...

H) ... unfortunately, that's the moment he's noticing the abutment and trying to correct for it. But he doesn't have much traction because the car is "up in the air" mid-rebound (low normal force).

I) By the time the rebound reverses and he gets significant weight back on the tires, bang.

--
Thanks,
DougF (KG4LMZ)


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