leakyroof
Member
- Joined
- Mar 23, 2011
- Messages
- 2,598
Sorry to hear you went through that ordeal. Audi Quattros were neat vehicles. My first taste of AWD when driving them at the 1st shop I got hired at.Before we criticize Mercedes too much…
I was stopped on Meadowbrook Parkway (Long Island) behind an accident. Mine was the last car to arrive before a drunk driver, traveling at the speed limit and having never touched his brakes, hit the read of my almost new 1987 Audi Quattro. The much heavier Chevy Blazer hit so hard that the seat back collapsed and I was completely supine when my head struck the seat back of the rear seat.
I was taken by ambulance to the hospital to have my neck X-rayed. Just soft tissue damage and pain. No structural damage.
I learned later that Mercedes had developed and patented a seat back latch designed to withstand that sort of impact. They offered the design for free to any car maker who wanted to use it. According to the article I read, it added about $5.00 to the manufacturing cost of the car.
Not one manufacturer took them up on that offer. I would have been much safer in a Mercedes than the Audi.
As an aside, in the early 1980s the P.I.T. Maneuver was developed to aid police in stopping fleeing cars. The technique involves having the police car pull alongside the fleeing vehicle, and using the front fender of the police car to push the rear fender of the fleeing car. This was designed to make the fleeing car spin out with minimal risk to the passengers.
Mercedes (with an assist from Bosch) thwarted that purpose and a few years later they developed the “Adavanced Stability Control” feature that applied the individual brakes to prevent spinning out. The purpose of ASC was to prevent spin outs, not to thwart PIT maneuvers.
The result of the ASC on the PIT maneuvers is that the fleeing car many times will flip over instead of spinning out. The ASC has gotten quite sophisticated and it might already be time for the PIT maneuvers to be retired. Unintended consequences.
Yes, Mercedes I think offered their research on side impact collision or offset head on collision to other Car makers after they came up with all the info through their efforts.
I still look on W123 Chassis vehicles with great fondness. Even though the Chrysler sourced HVAC system was a pain to deal with, and parts and repairs on it are now taking on a new meaning of scarce, that group of vehicles were something to be proud of,