Sponsored

Rivian Rollover

OP
OP
Ogre

Ogre

Well-known member
First Name
Dennis
Joined
Jul 3, 2021
Threads
166
Messages
10,735
Reaction score
27,050
Location
Ogregon
Vehicles
Model Y
Country flag
"Sorry Dave, I do not want to roll over."

-Some future Hummer, probably.
That’s a great way to sell classic cars for off-roading.

I’m just trying to imagine how destructive a Hummer rolling down one of the steeper routes in Moab would be. Is the body designed to withstand 9,000 pounds of truck bouncing down a mountain side? Add in the potential for a catastrophic vehicle fire and it would be a PR nightmare.

No wonder GM has a nanny mode.
Sponsored

 

Sonnus

Active member
First Name
Aaron
Joined
Jan 28, 2021
Threads
0
Messages
40
Reaction score
30
Location
Los Angeles
Vehicles
Model 3, Model Y, 2500HD
Country flag
I have an R1T and have noticed major oversteer when near lock while using the highest two suspension settings. This is no surprise, most people that have lifted trucks notice this due to altered front end geometry from stock. I had the same thing in my lifted 2500HD.

I will say, the Rivian’s oversteer was much more aggressive than my 2500HD. Once you’re approaching steering lock the wheel is practically yanked from your hands in the direction you are running (oversteer). I could easily see rolling the truck on soft ground if you weren’t expecting the nasty oversteer.

If the Cybertruck has adjustable height then I would expect it will suffer from the same issue. I’m not sure there’s any good way to get around the front end geometry issue as the suspension raises and lowers.
 

Crissa

Well-known member
First Name
Crissa
Joined
Jul 8, 2020
Threads
138
Messages
19,571
Reaction score
31,475
Location
Santa Cruz
Vehicles
2014 Zero S, 2013 Mazda 3
Country flag
I have an R1T and have noticed major oversteer when near lock while using the highest two suspension settings. This is no surprise, most people that have lifted trucks notice this due to altered front end geometry from stock. I had the same thing in my lifted 2500HD.

I will say, the Rivian’s oversteer was much more aggressive than my 2500HD. Once you’re approaching steering lock the wheel is practically yanked from your hands in the direction you are running (oversteer). I could easily see rolling the truck on soft ground if you weren’t expecting the nasty oversteer.

If the Cybertruck has adjustable height then I would expect it will suffer from the same issue. I’m not sure there’s any good way to get around the front end geometry issue as the suspension raises and lowers.
The electronic torque vectoring can help a little, but really it's going to need to have electronic steering to choose to understeer the front to make up for the back needing more sideways crawl to remain in traction.

-Crissa
 

GlockandRoll

Banned
Well-known member
Banned
Joined
Aug 19, 2022
Threads
3
Messages
303
Reaction score
302
Location
Area S4: Papoose Lake
Vehicles
Porsche on the weekends, diesel truck mon-fri
Occupation
Arms dealer and musician
Country flag
I've been in a roll-over truck accident offroad as a passenger, it's VERY common when turning and the front wheels dig in, and the back steps out via oversteer.
 

chalupacabre

Banned
Well-known member
Banned
First Name
chalupacabre
Joined
Jul 28, 2020
Threads
2
Messages
70
Reaction score
53
Location
Houston
Vehicles
2019 T3LR/DM
Occupation
vetter
Country flag
When I owned a ranch, I was guilty of not donning seat beltz, too, while driving on the range. Never rolled any trucks on the ranch, though.
Any links to Rivian crash tests videos? I love the Tesla crash test videos, especially the 10T "terminator" press on the M3 roof!
 


rlhamil

Well-known member
First Name
Richard
Joined
Apr 1, 2020
Threads
6
Messages
553
Reaction score
603
Location
Glen Burnie, Maryland
Vehicles
2002 Trans Am WS6, 2018 Kia Sportage, 2024 Cyberbeast FS
Occupation
retired
Country flag
The electronic torque vectoring can help a little, but really it's going to need to have electronic steering to choose to understeer the front to make up for the back needing more sideways crawl to remain in traction.

-Crissa
With sufficient sensors and independent control of at least front and back (and ideally with 4 motors, of each wheel) and automatically adjustable steering and profiles of needed corrections, most undesirable behavior could be compensated for. Although one still needs to be aware of special cases or recovery procedures in unusual circumstances, as the 737 Max problems showed.
 

GlockandRoll

Banned
Well-known member
Banned
Joined
Aug 19, 2022
Threads
3
Messages
303
Reaction score
302
Location
Area S4: Papoose Lake
Vehicles
Porsche on the weekends, diesel truck mon-fri
Occupation
Arms dealer and musician
Country flag
With sufficient sensors and independent control of at least front and back (and ideally with 4 motors, of each wheel) and automatically adjustable steering and profiles of needed corrections, most undesirable behavior could be compensated for. Although one still needs to be aware of special cases or recovery procedures in unusual circumstances, as the 737 Max problems showed.
Not if the wheel catches a rut and digs in. It's like a catapult at that point.
this is VERY common with off-road trucks, and as such, why 4x4's carry a much higher insurance premium.
 

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
Country flag
At one point, Musk said something about the air suspension playing a part in increasing turning performance. While I could see having the truck lean away from the roll being super helpful, I’m struggling to see how they could deploy it quickly enough to make a difference in a situation like this.



The time between entering a sharp turn or getting sideways, and rolling is likely less than half a second. It would take too much time to move enough air to affect this. Though maybe there are other levers they could pull. Some shocks can be adjusted quickly using magnetism. If the shocks were stiffened on the outside as the sideways motion were applied Maybe?



(Just thinking out loud here)



Aside from that, the biggest thing is to never drive with the truck in a higher than needed suspension mode.
There are heaps of vehicles with active lean control. I had a Land Rover Discovery early 2000's with active cornering from BMW, where it would lean into the corner when turning, and also lean uphill whilst doing accross a slope. Worked brilliantly and was a blast around roudabouts. Landcruiser has a Kinect system that had a passive system, that only keeps it level using a double acting hydraulic ram on the front and rear roll bar stabiliser. Not as good as the active system, but it only leaned out in the corners as much as the tyres compressed. It worked well offroad too, to put more even pressure on the wheels in uneven terrain. This system uses the principle that if both outside wheels experience a force resist, but if only one outside wheel has a force, allow wheel articulation. This is because in a corner both wheels experience a force, and in uneven terrain only one wheel experiences a bump at a time. Citroen, BMW, Audi and Porsche all have variations.

I'm hoping CT gets something like the Mercedes System. Video is worth watching, curve control starts at 3min.

 
Last edited:

GlockandRoll

Banned
Well-known member
Banned
Joined
Aug 19, 2022
Threads
3
Messages
303
Reaction score
302
Location
Area S4: Papoose Lake
Vehicles
Porsche on the weekends, diesel truck mon-fri
Occupation
Arms dealer and musician
Country flag
Air is to slow for active body control.
The air suspension on this truck is for off road/on road variations.
 
OP
OP
Ogre

Ogre

Well-known member
First Name
Dennis
Joined
Jul 3, 2021
Threads
166
Messages
10,735
Reaction score
27,050
Location
Ogregon
Vehicles
Model Y
Country flag
If the Cybertruck has adjustable height then I would expect it will suffer from the same issue. I’m not sure there’s any good way to get around the front end geometry issue as the suspension raises and lowers.
Cybertruck is going to be a bit more squat so should be a little less prone to this.

Aside from that, this should just be filed in the “Don’t do that” folder. Trucks with high suspension are less stable just by nature.
 


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
Country flag
Air is to slow for active body control.
The air suspension on this truck is for off road/on road variations.
Um did you watch the video?

It is fast enough to compensate for corners (3min mark) and bumps using forward vision that scans the road.

Which is what Ogre was talking about.
 

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
Country flag
Cybertruck is going to be a bit more squat so should be a little less prone to this.

Aside from that, this should just be filed in the “Don’t do that” folder. Trucks with high suspension are less stable just by nature.
Classic lever arm and fulcrum problem. In this case you want a shorter (lower) lever.
 

HaulingAss

Well-known member
Joined
Oct 3, 2020
Threads
28
Messages
10,298
Reaction score
20,706
Location
Western Washington, USA
Vehicles
Cybertruck DM, 2010 F-150, 2018 Performance Model 3, 2024 Performance Model 3
Country flag
Not if the wheel catches a rut and digs in. It's like a catapult at that point.
this is VERY common with off-road trucks, and as such, why 4x4's carry a much higher insurance premium.
The Cybertruck will have little in common with the bad handling characteristics of gasoline powered 4x4's and will be much harder to roll. Any vehicle can roll when given the right conditions and inputs, but some are much less inclined than others.
 
Last edited:

Ehninger1212

Well-known member
First Name
Jake
Joined
Dec 18, 2019
Threads
4
Messages
1,222
Reaction score
2,512
Location
Houston, TX
Vehicles
Audi A3 E-Tron - 2005 Land Rover LR3 - T-Bucket - 1951 chevy 3100
Occupation
Architect/Fabricator
Country flag
This R1T example was probably user error.

BUT it is not true that vehicles don't just randomly decide to roll over. Some do.
Very low probability with standard sedans but there is a measurably greater risk with vehicles that have high CGs like SUVs, vans and pickups.

One of the common random triggers is a tire blowout.
Even brand new, not defectively designed or under-inflate tires can blowout.

Even in an suburan or urban environment, SUVs that slides sideways on patch of ice hits a curb and the SUV rolls over or is involved in an accident where the SUV slides sideways hits a curb and the SUV rolls over.

There was a infamous series involving Ford Explorer & many badly made Firestone tires but the point here is that some vehicles are more susceptible to rollovers than others.

There is a reason many governments mandate a minimum specification for roof crush.

The National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA) reports that some 78,000 accidents occur every year due to tire failures.

NHTSA states that “more than 10,000 people a year are killed in rollover crashes.” They account for 33 percent of all passenger vehicle fatalities.

A 2012 NHTSA sample study of 5,470 car crashes found that SUVs were the most likely type of vehicle to be involved in a rollover.

In fact, nearly half (45%) of SUVs with pre-crash tire issues rolled over. By contrast, cars, pickup trucks, and vans with pre-crash tire issues rolled over less than 25% of the time.


---------------------------------

Firestone and Ford tire controversy of the 1990s saw hundreds of people die in automobile crashes caused by the failure of Firestone tires installed on light trucks made by Ford
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Firestone_and_Ford_tire_controversy

Police: Tire blowout caused rollover on I-95 in Stratford
Ford Econoline E250 van, in the center of three lanes when the rear passenger-side tire blew out, the report said. When the tire blew out, the report said, the driver lost control over the van, which then “rolled over onto its roof and came to a final rest in the center lane.”
By Tara O'Neill Oct. 1, 2020
https://www.ctpost.com/policereport...owout-caused-rollover-on-I-95-in-15612843.php

Tire blowout, rollover leaves one dead in Martin County
A Fort Pierce man died after the tire on his SUV blew out and he veered off Interstate 95
By Mauricio La Plante, Treasure Coast Newspapers
January 4, 2022
https://news.yahoo.com/tire-blowout-rollover-leaves-one-185714734.html

---------------------------------

Buying A Safer Car 2010 Valuable Information on Crash Tests, Rollover Ratings, and Safety Features
DOT HS 811 359
July 2010
https://tntrafficsafety.org/sites/default/files/buycar.pdf

.....
Electronic Stability Control (ESC),
Based on a NHTSA study of US crash data, NHTSA estimates equipping vehicles with ESC will reduce single-vehicle crashes of passenger cars by 26 percent and single-vehicle crashes of SUVs by 48 percent Preventing single-vehicle loss-of-control crashes is the most effective way to reduce deaths resulting from rollover crashes NHTSA estimates that ESC has the potential to prevent 64 percent of passenger car rollovers and 85 percent of SUV rollovers in single-vehicle crashes The same NHTSA study also found a reduction in certain multi-vehicle crashes involving SUVs

For these reasons, NHTSA recently issued a new Federal Motor Vehicle Safety Standard (FMVSS No 126) to require ESC systems on passenger cars, multipurpose passenger vehicles, trucks, and buses

---------------------------------
A vehicle is an inanimate object.. it cant decide to do anything..
Sponsored

 
 








Top