Pirateman, I went back and looked at the wreck photos and noticed the driver's side airbag hanging out of the steering wheel. I thought they failed? Oh hell I'm confused.
04rcmoneypit said:I don't know all the facts, but I did a search and found the pics of the truck. It appears the seatbelt was still buckled, but cut. It also appears that the airbag had deployed. This was a devestating impact. I can only hope Mrs. Woodruff can find peace.
first, let me straighten this out friend. Woody left the car wash running pretty strong according to the guys that worked there. We know woody was at least at 100mph. But there was no signs of him losing control, no brake marks, no trying to recover signs, just a gradual drift from the road. We suspect something happened to woody with his medical problems but dont know for sure. We are waiting on the autopsy report which may take 10 days.
its like this, when you pay 53000.00 for a vehicle you would expect it to function. You would not expect it to go in 7 times for steering problems. Especially a truck that is suppose to be the fastest production truck in the world.And you would expect the air bags to deploy at impact not 3 or 4 minutes later and the side air bags did not deploy at all.I dont pay 53000.00 for a cup of coffee at mcdonalds. Yes a 100 mph impact is devastating and nobody is to blame but woody for that but if his truck failed him who is to blame?BriteCrawler said:I'm as sorry as everyone else for the loss of a man's life. I've lost friends and family both to fatal car accidents. My wishes and thoughts are still with his family.
After reading back through that thread and catching this post:
If this is remotely accurate... and I'm not an automotive safety engineer... at 100 MPH (this is excessive speed on any highway in America, and public roads are certainly not maintained road surfaces like a track), I'd say the passenger belts and supplemental restraints installed in any automobile are pretty much not to blame for a fatality. That's kind of like suing McDonalds because you got burned on the coffee.
A steering failure is bad at any speed. Yet still, If he was actually doing 100 mph, how do you place blame on a steering issue on a public road?
thanks woody was a great guy. And yes he was in the wrong. But you have to place blame to both partys. If he had been running 70 on the interstate and his steering failed would it have made a difference? I think the 22 inch wheels are too large for the steering components. I was talking to a local tire dealer who puts on a lot of 22 24 and 26 in wheels and he said it wears heavy on the steering components.04 SRT 10 said:Wow...Been reading up on all this...Scares the shit out of me...Never
knew Woody but looked like a cool guy...Sorry...Intreseted in knowing
if putting on 20's would help or what...Has any member done this...
BriteCrawler said:I'm as sorry as everyone else for the loss of a man's life. I've lost friends and family both to fatal car accidents. My wishes and thoughts are still with his family.
After reading back through that thread and catching this post:
If this is remotely accurate... and I'm not an automotive safety engineer... at 100 MPH (this is excessive speed on any highway in America, and public roads are certainly not maintained road surfaces like a track), I'd say the passenger belts and supplemental restraints installed in any automobile are pretty much not to blame for a fatality. That's kind of like suing McDonalds because you got burned on the coffee.
A steering failure is bad at any speed. Yet still, If he was actually doing 100 mph, how do you place blame on a steering issue on a public road?
well saidamtrucker22 said:I say we will never know since they did not do their job. Although the way it looked there is a good chance he wouldn't of survived, we just will never know.
Whether or not he was going 100mph or not, these devices did not do their job and that is a big problem. Shouldn't airbags/seatbelts work at 70 mph all speeds?
pirateman said:the air bags deployed minutes after the accident when they were trying to get him out of the truck. the passenger air bag almost hit one of the guys helping. woodys autopsy revealed no heart attack or anything else. the seat belt was buckled but did not lock to hold him in place.
and the airbags didnt deploy?z-man said:
Almost all the accidents I have read about on these trucks doesn't have the air bags deployingpirateman said:and the airbags didnt deploy?
amtrucker22 said:I say we will never know since they did not do their job. Although the way it looked there is a good chance he wouldn't of survived, we just will never know.
Whether or not he was going 100mph or not, these devices did not do their job and that is a big problem. Shouldn't airbags/seatbelts work at all speeds?
pirateman said:and the airbags didnt deploy?