December 29, 200619 yr Just food for thought, this si not exactly very scientific but it does prove a point: why bother with B-pillars when push come to shove they're all pretty weak... I do not beleive a B-pillar saves lives more often than sheer luck does. http://www.crashanalysis.com/crash_test.htm
December 29, 200619 yr B pillars are not designed to prevent roof shear - by the time whatever is shearing off your roof gets to the B pillar, you'r pretty much dead anyway. B pillars provide enhanced structural rigidity (preventing cowl shake and chassis flex) and side impact protection. Can a car be designed without a B pillar? Absolutely - convertibles are a good example, as are a one or two high-end coupes. However, unless you severely overbuild and strengthen the chassis, it's going to flex and creak and be less safe in a T-bone collision. -RBB
December 29, 200619 yr Author I know RBB... & like I said this was a silly alegory but I thought that you guys might get a kick out of the wacky website. Recently I have done some drawings of a 4-door hardtop design that might be as good or better than a 4dr sedan in side impact. Cost is the only major problem/limitation but then again a four door hardtop would be a very niche driven and more upscale specialty vehicle these days. Edited December 29, 200619 yr by Sixty8panther
December 30, 200619 yr I like looking through those pictures. The 15-20mph crashes most cars do ok, no intrusion into the seats, but over 20mph you see the big ugly stuff. I did find it amusing that a Chevette fared better than an F-150 pickup at around 22mph.
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