I didn't really expect that someone would get sliced cleanly in half by the falling tempered glass, but it was surprising to see just how much damage it DID do to the dummy (yikes!).
And I do think Adam and Jamie dismissed the idea a little too quickly, since real people aren't made of a rubbery gelatin mold that bounces back to normal after being struck like that. At the very least, it looks like that glass would leave a pretty massive gouge in someone.
As for the lawnmower myth, it was pretty cool seeing the way they determined that the force of the rock actually exceeded that of a bullet. I'm not a physics expert so don't know if their technique was really the most accurate to use, but it sure looked convincing anyway.
And was not the result I expected at all.
I actually found that part a bit annoying, since the only tool they needed to determine that was math. They showed the equation right there on the screen. Kinetic energy is (1/2)mv^2, so if the rock had twice the mass of the bullet, it would've only needed to have 1/4 the speed to have the same impact energy (all else being equal). But I guess punching numbers into a calculator isn't as TV-worthy as building a big swingy gadget and shooting things into it.
Let's all just be thankful we don't live in a comic-book universe and Jamie is an evil, tech-based, villain. Or we'd all be screwed.
Let's all just be thankful we don't live in a comic-book universe and Jamie is an evil, tech-based, villain. Or we'd all be screwed.
If anyone could successfully pull off being a tech-based supervillain, it's Jamie Hyneman.
And as he plunges the hero into his elaborate deathtrap, he cackles and gloats, "There's your problem!"
I actually found that part a bit annoying, since the only tool they needed to determine that was math. They showed the equation right there on the screen. Kinetic energy is (1/2)mv^2, so if the rock had twice the mass of the bullet, it would've only needed to have 1/4 the speed to have the same impact energy (all else being equal). But I guess punching numbers into a calculator isn't as TV-worthy as building a big swingy gadget and shooting things into it.
But the beauty of the pendulum setup is that it directly measures how much energy will be transferred to the target. And transferred kinetic energy is what does the damage.
Yeah, the first thing I thought when they wanted to determine impact energy was "there's math for that". Hell, I think even I have a book of ballistic tables somewhere, leftover from my long-abandoned ammo reloading hobby. But you're right that a demo device is more TVgenic.
For the glass drop, when I saw the dummy compress and squeeze, I wondered if a skeleton would have provided the resistance needed to actually allow the glass to slice it. By that I mean, the gell dummy may have been too flexible for the glass edge to bite, but with a skeleton holding its shape, it wouldn't have been able to absorb the energy by compressing.
Surprised no one has posted on this yet. I suspect Christopher has stuff going on this weekend and is otherwise occupied.
What I'd like to see them do next is look into why phone conversations are such a problem as opposed to in-car ones, since we hardly hear of "distracted while driving" problems when it comes to in-car conversations.
Yeah with the phone myth, it does seem like an awful lot of it should depend on the kind of driving you're doing, which they did try to address in their tests. If you're just driving down the freeway or down a street you drive every day on the way to work (and know like the back of your hand), I imagine it would require a bit less attention than if you're driving downtown or in some insane city like SF with all it's crazy street layouts and pedestrians roaming everywhere.
Not to mention that the vast majority of phone conversations people have are probably a lot more casual and don't require the kind of mental concentration that Adam and Jamie required from their test subjects.
That said, I think they proved pretty well that hand's free driving certainly has the potential to be just as distracting as hand's full, which is all they were really trying to figure out.
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