For Augustwarthog1 wrote:1 months of sales.opik_bidin wrote: https://www.afr.com/companies/transport ... 904-p52nr0
New vehicle sales in Australia plunged by 10.1 per cent in August as buyers struggled to obtain finance for cars, extending an industry-wide malaise which has gripped the sector for 17 consecutive months.
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safer for the insiders, most are more dangerous for the outsiders
and if you wanna be safe, you can have the racer suit and helmet, proven by , nascar, F1 and Moto GP racers to decrease risk and save lives
I cycle with a few in the financial sector, they believe a recession is coming.
No wages growth, prices are rising and people are highly mortgaged. I am no financial expert but I don't disagree with them.
Less money to spend well you don't buy a new car.
The bit in bold is incorrect. Ancap safety ratings include harm caused to pedestrians and vulnerable road users in the event of a collision.
https://www.ancap.com.au/safety-ratings-explained
Our star ratings indicate the level of safety a vehicle provides for occupants and pedestrians in the event of a crash, as well as its ability — through technology — to avoid or minimise the effects of a crash.
ANCAP safety rating assessments extend beyond occupant protection and also look at the likely injury effect on pedestrians and other vulnerable road users. Pedestrian dummies are used to assist vehicle manufacturers develop more 'pedestrian -friendly' vehicle designs.
Looking at how heavy high the cars and how big the pillars are
Newer cars are designed to mitigate injury in a pedestrian impact.
https://www.canstarblue.com.au/vehicles ... ling-cars/
1st Toyota Hilux
2nd Ford Ranger
3rd Toyota Corolla
4th Hyundai i30
5th Toyota RAV4
6th Mazda3
7th Toyota LandCruiser
8th Mazda CX-5
9th Mitsubishi Triton
10th Nissan X-Trail
most in the list are big cars, harder to see what's in front and the pillars, huge risk of forgetting your child in car. heavier than smaller cars so damage the road and takes space more.
Being hit around your feet is different compared to being hit at your chest and head, and children, who are shorter has higher risk as they are shorter, meaning worse impact and less visibility.
what dummies are used? man,woman, children? Does it expand to visibility and used space?