• @schroedingershat
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    710 months ago

    Which is offset by the lack of safety regulation, high center of mass, heavier weight to crush the cabin in a rollover, and much higher likelihood of running over your own kids.

    Stop spreading propaganda by cherry picking,

    • @[email protected]
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      fedilink
      010 months ago

      Which is offset by the lack of safety regulation

      Citation needed. SUVs tend to be modern which would generally have stricter safety regulations

      high center of mass, heavier weight to crush the cabin in a rollover

      I wouldn’t have though that rollovers are a common cause of deaths or serious injuries in cars. The higher center of gravity is going to be offset by the wider wheel base, so it depends on the car.

      Traction seems like a much bigger problem, although many SUVs solve this with bigger wheels.

      and much higher likelihood of running over your own kids.

      Agree 100%

      Stop spreading propaganda by cherry picking,

      Look, fuck SUVs, obviously. If you aren’t a psychopath you should not feel safe driving those things. My point was specifically about the physics of collisions. What you’re bringing up can’t be answered with physics because it depends on the details of the car, we need real world statistics to continue this conversation.

      • @schroedingershat
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        310 months ago

        “Buy a new big car because it will be later year than a new small car and thus have newer safety features” is an incredibly wild way of drawing the exact opposite conclusion to the one you should have from that data.

      • Uranium3006
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        110 months ago

        Citation needed. SUVs tend to be modern which would generally have stricter safety regulations

        what? that makes no sense. SUVs in the US are generally regulated as light trucks, which have historically had laxer safety requirements for a given model year