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Thread: Police get riders at over 200 km/h

  1. #301
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    Quote Originally Posted by nallac View Post
    yeah same here...in 1st gear tho.....
    lawless heathen .. i bet you ride in jandals and a tshirt too??..


    i swear you youngsters these days with your loud rock and roll and video game parlors and MePods

    100 kph is fast enough for anyone .. too fast if ya ask me ...

    you should obey all the laws set down by the gubmint .. they know best and are only looking out for us ..







    sorry ... i tried so hard to keep a straight face when i typed that .. i think i wee'd a little ..
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  2. #302
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    There were too many Tui's moments in the last 301 posts to count...

    I could talk the legs of a Donkey when I get going but I reckon you lot could convince it to go for a walk afterwards...

  3. #303
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    Is that it? are we done? Please say we are...this is sooooo repetitious.
    Even if I told you all EXACTLY what happened, I doubt if anyone would be at all interested...seems a good old argument is what peeps on this thread want.
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  4. #304
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    Quote Originally Posted by munterk6 View Post
    Is that it? are we done? Please say we are...this is sooooo repetitious.
    Even if I told you all EXACTLY what happened, I doubt if anyone would be at all interested...seems a good old argument is what peeps on this thread want.
    please tell... we are interested

  5. #305
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    Quote Originally Posted by Mikkel View Post
    Ixion covered this quite well I think. But I think you'd have to agree that sleeping or distracted motorists in vehicles weighing more than 1000 kgs travelling at 95 km/h constitute more of a risk to you as a person than someone who's operating a ~200 kg machine at 211 km/h.

    I certainly know which body carries the higher momentum - which ultimately is what you should be concerned with if it ends up heading towards yourself.
    You are completely wrong.

    Kinetic Energy of a moving object = 0.5 * mass * velocity^2

    In other words, if you travel at twice the speed then you have four times the kinetic energy.

    Let's look at the numbers in your example:

    E_k of car = 0.5 * 1,000 (kg) * [26.39 (m/s)]^2 = 348 kJ

    E_k of bike = 0.5 * 200 (kg) * [58.61 (m/s)]^2 = 344 kJ

    In other words both vehicles have exactly the same amount of energy at impact, and will cause exactly the same amount of damage.
    The greatest pleasure of my recent life has been speed on the road. . . . I lose detail at even moderate speed but gain comprehension. . . . I could write for hours on the lustfulness of moving swiftly.

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  6. #306
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    so if the car was loaded up 2000kg then there would be a difference of????

    what about a 4500kg camper????

  7. #307
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    Quote Originally Posted by Forest View Post
    You are completely wrong.

    Kinetic Energy of a moving object = 0.5 * mass * velocity^2

    In other words, if you travel at twice the speed then you have four times the kinetic energy.

    Let's look at the numbers in your example:

    E_k of car = 0.5 * 1,000 (kg) * [26.39 (m/s)]^2 = 348 kJ

    E_k of bike = 0.5 * 200 (kg) * [58.61 (m/s)]^2 = 344 kJ

    In other words both vehicles have exactly the same amount of energy at impact, and will cause exactly the same amount of damage.
    It's quite rich that you who haven't learned - or maybe simply didn't bother - to read in the first place is claiming what I posted is wrong.

    I didn't mention energy - I mentioned momentum (equal to the product of velocity and mass). If you want to analyse an impact you will consider the momentum of the involved vehicles. Both momentum and energy are conserved enterties - however energy can dissipate in many different ways: heat, deformation, etc. Momentum however does not dissipate in that manner. This means it is easy to calculate the change of momentum experienced by either party in a collision. Since force is equal to the time-derivative of momentum (F = dp/dt) you can calculate the force excerted during the collision if you can estimate the time that the collision took. And force is what will break your bones and burst your arteries and internal organs.
    Once you have established the change in momentum you can then estimate what energy was absorbed as deformation of the vehicles using the conservation of energy. The more the better - it means that the impact took longer time and so the forces involved would have been lower.

    If you are in your car you WILL prefer to be hit by a motorcycle at 211 km/h compared to a car at 95 km/h. (The point of impact and other circumstances being the same). If you are travelling in a car (1000 kg) at 100 km/h and have a frontal collision with a bike (200 kg) travelling at 200 km/h you will continue travelling forward at 50 km/h. If you have a collision with another car (1000 kg) travelling at 100 km/h you will come to a complete stop - what do YOU think will hurt the most?

    [nerd part]

    Conservation of momentum - assuming the vehicles "stick" after the collision. m and v are the mass and velocity of vehicle 1 and M and V are the mass and velocity of vehicle 2 - v' is the velocity of the "compound" body following the impact.

    mv + MV = (m+M)v' <=> v' = (mv+MV)/(m+M)

    Vehicle 1: m = 200 kg, v = -200 km/h (negative since direction is opposite to vehicle 2).
    Vehicle 2: M = 1000 kg, V = 100 km/h.

    v' = (200 kg * -200 km/h + 1000 kg * 100 km/h)/(200 kg + 1000 kg) = (60000 kg*km/h)/(1200 kg) = 50 km/h
    It is preferential to refrain from the utilisation of grandiose verbiage in the circumstance that your intellectualisation can be expressed using comparatively simplistic lexicological entities. (...such as the word fuck.)

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  8. #308
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    Quote Originally Posted by Forest View Post
    Let's look at the numbers in your example:

    E_k of car = 0.5 * 1,000 (kg) * [26.39 (m/s)]^2 = 348 kJ

    E_k of bike = 0.5 * 200 (kg) * [58.61 (m/s)]^2 = 344 kJ

    In other words both vehicles have exactly the same amount of energy at impact, and will cause exactly the same amount of damage.
    Good work that man! I would add that all that kenetic energy is going to be concentrated in a smaller area too instead of being spread out as it would be by a car so if you happen to be behind that point of impact it's not going to be good(I'm sure we all remember that old photo of the sports-bike embedded in a wee nana car from Europe somewhere?)To my simple mind I think that if you are the guy pulling out of a side-road there's not going to be too much difference being hit by a 1000kg at 100kph or a 200kg vehicle at 200kph. He's probably going to be just as dead.
    Intereresting analogy just ocurred to me. Would you rather be hit on the head by a full swung carpenter's hammer or by a half swung sledgehammer?
    Grow older but never grow up

  9. #309
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    Quote Originally Posted by DougieNZ View Post
    Apart from the fact that you would need to be a dickhead to be doing that sort of speed and putting yourself and innocent others at risk?

    Sorry, but that is FAR too fast to be going on a public road. Go to a racetrack if you want to do speeds like that. We should NOT be condoning this sort of thing IMHO.
    Cummon! we've all done it before. wrong place, wrong time
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  10. #310
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    Quote Originally Posted by Mikkel View Post
    [nerd part]


    all went over my head

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    Quote Originally Posted by Oakie View Post
    Good work that man!
    Making flawed conclusions and calculating the kinetic energy of two moving bodies.

    Consider a .50 BMG round (~50 g, ~900 m/s) and an elephant trundling along (3000 kg, 13 km/h) - they have about the same kinetic energy (~20 kJ) and I'm not going to argue which is more deadly. But could you please tell me which of them would be better at moving a heavy body (e.g. a car) when they collide with it?
    It is preferential to refrain from the utilisation of grandiose verbiage in the circumstance that your intellectualisation can be expressed using comparatively simplistic lexicological entities. (...such as the word fuck.)

    Remember your humanity, and forget the rest. - Joseph Rotblat

  12. #312
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    Quote Originally Posted by Mikkel View Post

    It's quite rich that you who haven't learned - or maybe simply didn't bother - to read in the first place is claiming what I posted is wrong.

    I didn't mention energy - I mentioned momentum (equal to the product of velocity and mass). If you want to analyse an impact you will consider the momentum of the involved vehicles. Both momentum and energy are conserved enterties - however energy can dissipate in many different ways: heat, deformation, etc. Momentum however does not dissipate in that manner. This means it is easy to calculate the change of momentum experienced by either party in a collision. Since force is equal to the time-derivative of momentum (F = dp/dt) you can calculate the force excerted during the collision if you can estimate the time that the collision took. And force is what will break your bones and burst your arteries and internal organs.
    Once you have established the change in momentum you can then estimate what energy was absorbed as deformation of the vehicles using the conservation of energy. The more the better - it means that the impact took longer time and so the forces involved would have been lower.

    If you are in your car you WILL prefer to be hit by a motorcycle at 211 km/h compared to a car at 95 km/h. (The point of impact and other circumstances being the same). If you are travelling in a car (1000 kg) at 100 km/h and have a frontal collision with a bike (200 kg) travelling at 200 km/h you will continue travelling forward at 50 km/h. If you have a collision with another car (1000 kg) travelling at 100 km/h you will come to a complete stop - what do YOU think will hurt the most?
    Yes the momentum is conserved.

    However you have redefined your argument (which is a common rhetorical trick).

    In your original post you made absolutely no reference to what kind of vehicle the observer was traveling in, and then in your reply you have suddenly specified that the observer is traveling in a car.

    Why is the observer in a car? Why not another motorcycle, a bicycle, or a bus?

    My point was valid. Using the numbers you provided in your example, the speeding motorcycle and the non-speeding car each have the same kinetic energy.
    The greatest pleasure of my recent life has been speed on the road. . . . I lose detail at even moderate speed but gain comprehension. . . . I could write for hours on the lustfulness of moving swiftly.

    --T.E. Lawrence (of Arabia)

  13. #313
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    Quote Originally Posted by Forest View Post
    Yes the momentum is conserved.

    However you have redefined your argument (which is a common rhetorical trick).

    In your original post you made absolutely no reference to what kind of vehicle the observer was traveling in, and then in your reply you have suddenly specified that the observer is traveling in a car.

    Why is the observer in a car? Why not another motorcycle, a bicycle, or a bus?
    Not a trick, where did I redefine anything? I may have been vague - although not by intent, more likely laziness.

    If you are on a bike I probably wouldn't bother even looking at the numbers, with any likelihood you'd be in a sorry state indeed.

    The reason for putting the observer in the car is more to do with the argument being about putting other road-users at risk - most road-users are in cars.
    It is preferential to refrain from the utilisation of grandiose verbiage in the circumstance that your intellectualisation can be expressed using comparatively simplistic lexicological entities. (...such as the word fuck.)

    Remember your humanity, and forget the rest. - Joseph Rotblat

  14. #314
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    Quote Originally Posted by 3umph View Post
    so if the car was loaded up 2000kg then there would be a difference of????

    what about a 4500kg camper????
    I used the numbers that he provided in his example.

    If you want to consider the kinetic energy of larger vehicles, then the numbers will of course be different.
    The greatest pleasure of my recent life has been speed on the road. . . . I lose detail at even moderate speed but gain comprehension. . . . I could write for hours on the lustfulness of moving swiftly.

    --T.E. Lawrence (of Arabia)

  15. #315
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    Quote Originally Posted by Mikkel View Post
    Not a trick, where did I redefine anything? I may have been vague - although not by intent, more likely laziness.

    If you are on a bike I probably wouldn't bother even looking at the numbers, with any likelihood you'd be in a sorry state indeed.

    The reason for putting the observer in the car is more to do with the argument being about putting other road-users at risk - most road-users are in cars.
    No drama.

    My point was only that introducing a discussion of momentum only makes sense if you know the specific masses and velocities of both parties that are involved in the collision.

    If you don't know the masses and velocities of the colliding vehicles then you cannot draw a general conclusion.
    The greatest pleasure of my recent life has been speed on the road. . . . I lose detail at even moderate speed but gain comprehension. . . . I could write for hours on the lustfulness of moving swiftly.

    --T.E. Lawrence (of Arabia)

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