You failed physics in school, didn’t you?
Also modern passenger cars have crumple zones and pedestrian protection systems. Light commercial vehicles are legally exempt from these requirements because they are designed to be commercial vehicles. They are not designed to be driven by someone who doesn’t understand that 3000kg is more than 500kg and that changing the velocity of something that weighs more requires more “work”.
This example is also why Sports car brakes and SUV brakes are much more expensive than compact and subcompact car brakes. Popular LCV brakes are cheap because of volumes and fleet discounts.
Dodge RAMs, Ford F150s and Silverado’s all require LCV brakes, but because very few people in Australia are stupid enough to buy them as a daily run-around, there is not the market demand to create lower prices.
This is OK for people legitimately using it as a work vehicle, because they can claim depreciation.
When ignorant private individuals who can’t afford to buy these vehicles, and can’t afford to maintain these vehicles are out driving on our urban and suburban streets, other people in normal sized cars, motorbikes, pushbikes and pedestrians get killed.
Zagorath@aussie.zone 11 months ago
Yank tanks are more dangerous for a few reasons.
The shape of their frontal area means that when you hit an adult, instead of being launched over the top of the car thanks to being hit in the legs, they get hit in the chest and go under instead. Far more deadly.
They also have abysmal sight lines. You can fit a dozen children sitting on the ground in front of them in a line before you can see any of them.
So not only is a yank tank more likely to kill you if you get hit by it, it’s also way more likely to hit you in the first place, because it’s harder for the driver to see you.