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 Post subject: Re: Miata Upside down
PostPosted: Wed Sep 20, 2006 2:11 pm 
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Les Davis wrote:
the rollbar is most likely a good thing in the even of a rollover accident, but I'm vastly more likely to get rearended by someone than roll my Miata over.


That the same exact problem I have. Sonya would like to try HPDE in the Miata, but with my height a roll bar is literally less than 1" from the back of my head. We sometimes use it as a DD and the risk of getting rear ended is too great vs. a rollover.

I guess the moto is don't buy a Miata unless you are a midget...uh I mean "little person".

BTW Dustin, I'm pretty sure Mike has the HDDD bar in his 10AE.

Edit: Robert Plank IS a midget...and he still hit his head! :shock:

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 Post subject: Re: Miata Upside down
PostPosted: Wed Sep 20, 2006 2:19 pm 
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[is too great vs. a rollover.

I guess the moto is don't buy a Miata unless you are a midget...uh I mean "little person".

Does Sonya read this forum?

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 Post subject:
PostPosted: Wed Sep 20, 2006 2:28 pm 
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Hmmm. You guys have a point. Maybe I need to rethink this...

Actually, Vincent - it's a Sport bar in the 10AE (came w/ the car from Brad).

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 Post subject:
PostPosted: Wed Sep 20, 2006 2:37 pm 
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I had a tr6 back in the old days, and back then you put foam around your roll bar and wrapped it with electrical tape. All us cool racer wantabees did it. It felt a little better when you banged it.

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 Post subject: Re: Miata Upside down
PostPosted: Wed Sep 20, 2006 2:43 pm 
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clinehall wrote:
Does Sonya read this forum?


Nope! :D

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 Post subject:
PostPosted: Wed Sep 20, 2006 2:44 pm 
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MikeWhitney wrote:
Actually, Vincent - it's a Sport bar in the 10AE (came w/ the car from Brad).


I stand corrected! So DOES the sport bar sit further back?

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'07 Ford Fusion SE (205,000 miles and counting)
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 Post subject:
PostPosted: Wed Sep 20, 2006 2:46 pm 
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clinehall wrote:
I had a tr6 back in the old days, and back then you put foam around your roll bar and wrapped it with electrical tape. All us cool racer wantabees did it. It felt a little better when you banged it.


I'm sure the soft padding would deflect to almost nil rendering it useless in a crash between the bar and your head. The new SFI stuff isn't made for contact with your (bare) head either.

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Vincent Keene
'06 Ford Mustang GT (track rat)
'15 Dodge Charger R/T (yeah, it's got a HEMI!)
'07 Ford Fusion SE (205,000 miles and counting)
'98 Chevy Z-24 (retired)
'93 Acura Integra (Team SWB 24HOL Car)


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 Post subject:
PostPosted: Wed Sep 20, 2006 7:21 pm 
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Vincent Keene wrote:
clinehall wrote:
I had a tr6 back in the old days, and back then you put foam around your roll bar and wrapped it with electrical tape. All us cool racer wantabees did it. It felt a little better when you banged it.


I'm sure the soft padding would deflect to almost nil rendering it useless in a crash between the bar and your head. The new SFI stuff isn't made for contact with your (bare) head either.


Not the point, It looked cool, just like the guys in Road & Track at the SCCA runoffs!

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 Post subject:
PostPosted: Thu Sep 21, 2006 12:45 am 
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Vincent Keene wrote:
MikeWhitney wrote:
Actually, Vincent - it's a Sport bar in the 10AE (came w/ the car from Brad).


I stand corrected! So DOES the sport bar sit further back?


I took a good look at it tonight, and to be honest, it's hard to tell since I don't have one w/ HDHCDD sitting next to it for comparison. First guess is, no, it doesn't sit any further back. If I were flopping around in an accident I could probably hit it with my head. I drive with the seat one-click from full-back. In a direct rear-end, if the seat back didn't break*, I doubt I would come in contact -- the seat is in the way.

* I was at the event at CMP when Robert cracked his noggin -- his seatback *did* break, which IMO was the main contributor to the severity of the impact to his head. I don't know if NA Miatas seats are inhereltly weak, or if the seatback is designed/expected to break. If I remember correctly, only the right-side pivot broke, so the seatback rotated somewhat and probably allowed him to slip sideways and back at the same time.

I'm starting to understand why many modern convertibles have either pop-up hoops or small ones directly behind the seat..... Makes me go "hmmm".

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 Post subject:
PostPosted: Thu Sep 21, 2006 9:43 am 
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MikeWhitney wrote:
Vincent Keene wrote:
MikeWhitney wrote:
Actually, Vincent - it's a Sport bar in the 10AE (came w/ the car from Brad).


I stand corrected! So DOES the sport bar sit further back?


I took a good look at it tonight, and to be honest, it's hard to tell since I don't have one w/ HDHCDD sitting next to it for comparison. First guess is, no, it doesn't sit any further back. If I were flopping around in an accident I could probably hit it with my head. I drive with the seat one-click from full-back. In a direct rear-end, if the seat back didn't break*, I doubt I would come in contact -- the seat is in the way.

* I was at the event at CMP when Robert cracked his noggin -- his seatback *did* break, which IMO was the main contributor to the severity of the impact to his head. I don't know if NA Miatas seats are inhereltly weak, or if the seatback is designed/expected to break. If I remember correctly, only the right-side pivot broke, so the seatback rotated somewhat and probably allowed him to slip sideways and back at the same time.

I'm starting to understand why many modern convertibles have either pop-up hoops or small ones directly behind the seat..... Makes me go "hmmm".


If you can drive one click from furthest back, and STILL be in front of the bar, yours is definitely further back than my HDHCDD. If you measure yours, I'll measure mine. uhhh..... I'm thinking top of steering wheel to closest point at the top of main hoop would be a good measure.

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 Post subject:
PostPosted: Thu Sep 21, 2006 10:50 am 
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Vincent Keene wrote:
clinehall wrote:
I had a tr6 back in the old days, and back then you put foam around your roll bar and wrapped it with electrical tape. All us cool racer wantabees did it. It felt a little better when you banged it.


I'm sure the soft padding would deflect to almost nil rendering it useless in a crash between the bar and your head. The new SFI stuff isn't made for contact with your (bare) head either.


Continuing thread hijack (should I break this out into a new thread???)..

I think this is all good points about a convertible such as a Miata. That in stock condition, there is pretty much nothing for an unprotected head (i.e. no helmet) to hit and that addition of bars will or may makes things worse. But is there not the same concern about the protection in hard-top cars?

Granted, I am tall, but pretty much most hardtop cars I have been in, I could smack the "B" pillar or the top of the door frame with my head in a collision. Those only have a slight amount of interior upholstery (hard plastic and thin fabric) that covers the metal body which has to offer next to zero protection. I see this pretty much as the same issue as hitting an unpadded bar in a convertible with an unprotected head.

The point I am trying to make is that based upon what is being said here, it would seem you could argue that a stock convertible is much safer to drive than a normal car from a rear or side impact point of view. And I personally still think a hardtop is a “safer” car (all other things being equal). So what I wonder is if there is really any empirical evidence that says a bar WITH padding AND a seat that should not collapse is really that unsafe? Is it so risky, that it is safer to NOT add roll over protection for a daily driver? How do you balance out the added roll over protection a bar gives with the real or perceived added risk from a rear or side collision?

I am not arguing one way or the other. I am just curious as to what the answer is.

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 Post subject:
PostPosted: Thu Sep 21, 2006 11:27 am 
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Richard, my only response to you would be that assuming your driving a modern car with airbags, the factory seatbelt and front airbag are working together to do their best to keep your head from those hard objects. Obviously they are not perfect, hence the advent of side curtain airbags, but it is their intent. The seatbelt and airbag do nothing to keep you from going backwards and up in the event of a rear end collision when your seat back breaks, in fact they may exacerbate the situation. A convertible may well be a more safe car in this situation assuming your car does have side curtain airbags, unless of course the openness facilitates your head coming in contact with some portion of the vehicle that is t-boneing you. I think if your going to drive any car on the street with a rollbar, convertible or not, you should have a seat brace like VK has in his Z24.


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 Post subject:
PostPosted: Thu Sep 21, 2006 11:30 am 
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Richard Casto wrote:
(should I break this out into a new thread???)


Yes, please do. Also one could argue that all the goverment tests seemed to be geared toward fornt end and finally now side impact collisions. I don't thing the rear end is high on the list, though IMO it should be.

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 Post subject:
PostPosted: Thu Sep 21, 2006 2:56 pm 
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Vincent Keene wrote:
Richard Casto wrote:
(should I break this out into a new thread???)


Yes, please do.


Done. Original thread is here...

http://thscc.com/phpBB/viewtopic.php?p=47029

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 Post subject:
PostPosted: Thu Sep 21, 2006 3:19 pm 
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Les Davis wrote:
Richard, my only response to you would be that assuming your driving a modern car with airbags, the factory seatbelt and front airbag are working together to do their best to keep your head from those hard objects. Obviously they are not perfect, hence the advent of side curtain airbags, but it is their intent. The seatbelt and airbag do nothing to keep you from going backwards and up in the event of a rear end collision when your seat back breaks, in fact they may exacerbate the situation. A convertible may well be a more safe car in this situation assuming your car does have side curtain airbags, unless of course the openness facilitates your head coming in contact with some portion of the vehicle that is t-boneing you. I think if your going to drive any car on the street with a rollbar, convertible or not, you should have a seat brace like VK has in his Z24.


Les, I pretty much agree if you limit the discussion to modern cars. I think that since most tests are for front impact, that you are less likely to hit something like the "B" pillar or door frame except for maybe some type of rebound action. And with really modern cars that have side impact air bags, they are really trying to solve the issues I mention. I think if you watch the "before and after" crash tests for side impact air bags (heads hitting everything from door frames to the hood/grill of the car that hits you) you can see that the issues I mention existed, but they just didn't want to talk about them until they had a solution (side impact air bags)

But I am also curious how this fits in with much older cars. My 914 has a built in roll hoop and it is pretty much in the same location that a roll bar would be if it was a closed top vehical. Not directly behind my head, but close enough that I think I could hit it in certain scenarios. I am pretty sure that any existing padding is cosmetic in nature and more to prevent bumped heads during normal entry/exit vs. crashes. I am also guessing that the safety regulations from this time period only include frontal crash testing. My 1972 model does not even have any side impact beams in the doors (came just a year or two later in the 914) and the pre 5 MPH bumpers use 3/4 rubber to cusion impacts (later models had gas cushioning in the bumpers). This is why this car weights nearly 2000 lbs stock. So I am wondering if a full cage + padding in my 914 might actually be a safety improvement even if not wearing a helmet?

For background purposes, my 914 is going to be a 90% track/autocross car, but will be street legal as I will be driving it to/from events and maybe infrequently on the street on nice summer days. I also have to mention that in the late 1980's I totalled a 914 in a severe front and side impact crash and walked away with just bruises from the seat belts.

Vincent Keene wrote:
Also one could argue that all the goverment tests seemed to be geared toward fornt end and finally now side impact collisions. I don't thing the rear end is high on the list, though IMO it should be.


I actually think that rear impact has been on the list and has been looked at a lot recently. However I think mostly from the point of view of the seat and the location and design of the headrest. Apparently headrest design has a huge impact on how much head and neck injury you will receive in a rear in collision. I think the side impact stuff is the new kid on the block. Sometimes I wonder if the head/headrest interaction is different with a helmet on.

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