For drivers ed, I have to do a poster about basically anything that has to do with driving. Other people are doing posters on stuff like drunk driving. I am going to make a poster about physics. I have a rough draft due Friday. On my poster, I think I will mainly describe the three main car movements that affect its handling: Pitch, yaw, and roll. I am going to take screenshots from LFS, and use them as examples on my poster.
To link this to what we learn in drivers ed, I am also going to say how because of these forces, when you see a sign warning about a sharp curve, you really should slow down to the suggested speed. Especially if you don't know the road at all. But, if you drive on a certain road every single day, then you sometimes know how fast you can safely drive. Like, on some corners where I live, I almost got hit head-on by a soccer moms in her huge SUV who drove halfway into my lane. Now, I slow down on that corner, and drive with my right tires touching the shoulder lane to avoid soccer moms in huge SUVs that don't know anything about the handling of their cars. Especially since the car I drive is my dads Saturn SL2, which only weighs 2,400lbs (1088kg). I don't think a head on collision with a my dads car, and a SUV twice its weight, with both cars travelling at ~30mph would be too fun. It would basically be like hitting a wall @60mph.
Maybe on my poster, I will include something that has to do with the physics of a crash. That is also another important aspect to driving. I honestly do not go more then 5mph over the speed limit at all, because I am afraid of crashing. As well as you can drive, it only takes one "twat" (as they say in the UK :P) to total your car. So, if anyone can help me on what to include on my poster, it would be nice. I knew that I just had to do a project that included LFS somehow!
To link this to what we learn in drivers ed, I am also going to say how because of these forces, when you see a sign warning about a sharp curve, you really should slow down to the suggested speed. Especially if you don't know the road at all. But, if you drive on a certain road every single day, then you sometimes know how fast you can safely drive. Like, on some corners where I live, I almost got hit head-on by a soccer moms in her huge SUV who drove halfway into my lane. Now, I slow down on that corner, and drive with my right tires touching the shoulder lane to avoid soccer moms in huge SUVs that don't know anything about the handling of their cars. Especially since the car I drive is my dads Saturn SL2, which only weighs 2,400lbs (1088kg). I don't think a head on collision with a my dads car, and a SUV twice its weight, with both cars travelling at ~30mph would be too fun. It would basically be like hitting a wall @60mph.
Maybe on my poster, I will include something that has to do with the physics of a crash. That is also another important aspect to driving. I honestly do not go more then 5mph over the speed limit at all, because I am afraid of crashing. As well as you can drive, it only takes one "twat" (as they say in the UK :P) to total your car. So, if anyone can help me on what to include on my poster, it would be nice. I knew that I just had to do a project that included LFS somehow!