LightningShow
Well-known member
Looks like the wiring for whatever instrumentation they were running might've popped the rear window.
Sponsored
If I had to guess, it's the frame flexing and the bed hitting the cab broke it.Looks like the wiring for whatever instrumentation they were running might've popped the rear window.
Not if your job is being a crash dummy. The poor thing does not even get the option to die. Almost reminds me of my last job.Beats being dead.
The battery is there. They detect electrolyte spillage. Here's writeup pdf https://www.nhtsa.gov/sites/nhtsa.gov/files/2022-05/Test-Procedure-305-02-February-2022-tag.pdf Sponsored
It's SOP.I can't see a reference to the Lightning test is that link.
Ways to avoid “rain of glass on kids”So, even the crash testers couldn't find anything but Lariats on the lot. ROFL.
Shame they pull the battery, that mass is absolutely going to change the physics of a wreck. I get the safety factor, but you would think they could install an equivalent hunk of lead or something.
The way the mirrors flex, and the way the front windows pop up out of the doors (they were rolled down) looked crazy to me. Overall, looked decently safe other than the amount of rear glass that's going to rain down on my kids in the back seat, but maybe that was partially due to the equipment they were running through the rear window.