JBee
Well-known member
- First Name
- JB
- Joined
- Nov 22, 2019
- Threads
- 18
- Messages
- 4,913
- Reaction score
- 6,362
- Location
- Australia
- Vehicles
- Cybertruck
- Occupation
- . Professional Hobbyist
I think the scale of the CT on the left is too small in that comparison. But even there the bumper is doing most of the safety structure on both, as you can also see on the MY frame. The grill can also be compressed into any side structure on impact, like the side doors that are also hinged, meaning the safety issue can be designed around if they wanted to without to much effort or extra material.Just eyeballing it, but looks to me like the frunk bottom on the Cybertruck is about 8” lower than on the F150. There is a lot of chunk underneath where the truck part of the F150 starts. The side view you posted above doesn’t show how much of that facia is below the frunk bottom at all.
The blue area is space which the F150 has for re-enforcing the front end which the Cybertruck would not. A frunk with a lifting face would reduce total area they can reinforce for impact protection by half versus having a bucket style frunk.
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My biggest safety concern with the front is if that hood is 3mm SS then where will it go as a nearly incompressible item (because of the flat angle orientation) and if it is that thick, how the CT fares for pedestrian safety. Overall I think the front will be made from much lighter material, and have some sort internal compliant structure. Same for the grill and sides.
For us Aussies this will mean we will need a bull bar (roobar) anyway, which obviously makes the pedestrian safety mute. I would really like to see a easily replaceable, front external multistaage full width airbag at one stage, as this is one of the only things that would be good for both wildlife and humans. It also would give another level of retardation for higher speed impacts, and nearly complete protection for minor impacts.
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