Quote:
Originally Posted by HPsauce
The screen can be seen flying off in the impact, so I guess it was put back but maybe not very securely? Given the way it's bonded that presumably wouldn't happen to a normal model in a collision?
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Yeah, you can see them cutting them both out early on, and they clearly didn't bond it back in. It certainly wouldn't fly out like that if fitted properly, and I think were it left in the scuttle and roof would not have folded up like they did. A bonded laminated screen conveys a considerable amount of strength to the roof structure. There used to be videos (which I can no longer find) of testing bonded vs gasketed screens in rollovers, I think for either a Vauxhall Cavalier or Vectra, and it makes a substantial difference. Interestingly, VW bonded the screen in to the mk2 Golf Rallye for better body stiffness, where the ordinary models still had rubber seals.
Quote:
Originally Posted by ainarssems
I think their point was to take it apart to scan and measure aluminium components to feed into their 3D computer model
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Fair point, but in that case it seems odd for the NHTSA to be reverse-engineering someone else's product, since Audi would have done all this themselves before production started. I thought the NHTSA's remit would be to test products for consumer safety, but perhaps it goes further than that?