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Hi Merc:
Rather than weight I was thinking more in terms of bears having a lower center of gravity than deer, and also of deer tending (I guess) to leap when they panic. Hence they'd flip over the bonnet more easily. Although I guess a bear might rear up to fight - imagine seeing THAT through your windscreen! |
Gotcha.. I agree completely.
This is what I always wanted to get for my pick-up truck but the thought of the added weight and the drag on my gas milage made me make a wiser decision. http://www.roadarmor.com/ra3/ford_trucks.html http://www.4wheelonline.com/images/C...RDARM_body.jpg |
It's a magic truck that changes from blue to red.
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The ironic thing about that "road armor" is that the stronger it is, the more likely you are to die in an accident, because you are eliminating the crumple zones that absorb all that kinetic energy. It's also irresponsible because you endanger the other vehicles on the road, taking away the crumple zones that would make an accident less dangerous for them. But hey, if you hit a pedestrian, your grill won't break. It's all worth it.
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OK, seriously. Is it the lighting, or what? The truck, the same in every other way I can see, is blue in the first pics.
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The red truck is the one that hit the bear. The blue one is the one that is hauling the carcass away.
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The hauler is blue, has double back wheels, a spare tire on the roof, and side handles on the frame at the back. The hitter is red, and has single wheels and toolboxes on the flatbed at the back and is considerably newer. Also the blue one has a huge dead bear on the back ;) Let's play spot the differences! |
Ahhh. I see. Them having the same bar contraption on the back threw me.
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You need crumple zones if you hit an object that is immovable or at least very much larger than yours - say, a semi trailer. Without them the deceleration is passed on to the passengers at full intensity. Mind you, driving something like what you posted here ... there aren't gonna be too many things that are immovable. That crash bar is good for protecting the vehicle when it hits very large animals: moose, deer, bears. It may leave you (the human cargo) vulnerable in sudden-stop collisions. You'd want to weigh up the likelihood of each happening, allow for gas consumption, do the cost-benefit analysis, and make your decision. Unless very large animals are common where you frequently drive, I don't think it would be justified. Seems like you thunk this all through already though. With what was shown here rollover would be a bigger worry for me. Or running over your kids in the driveway because you couldn't see them. |
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