Yup, it wedged under the safety rail. There is another photo showing the car from the front, with the rail pushed all the way up against the front seats. The driver wouldn't have stood a chance. You'd think that Autobahns would have better contrived safety rails.
I wouldn't call a 911 'lower' than a normal car, driving position wise. The idea of a saftey barrier is to stop cars crossing over to the other side in the event of a crash. This means they have to be low enough to not let them slide underneath, but high enough to stop them flipping over. Ideally, the barriers should not have a gap at the bottom of them, as this kind of thing will happen.
Maybe, but you have to wonder, what are they really gaining from driving on the open road as opposed to the many varied types of test tracks (some of which are designed to be like the open road) and runways (I'm guessing that Porsche do have the monetary resources to test on a runway or something similar) available?
It's not about driving position, it's about centre of gravity and the ride height. The nose of the porsche is lower than the more 'conventional' cars the barrier is designed for.
It wasn't a speed test, it was a reliability test and seen as its going to be a road car, the best simulation would be to drive it on the road not a test track.
Agree , but looking at the pictures i think the car hit the barrier while going backwards/sideways.
Left front is undamaged. And the barrier is bend that way.