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Note: This is meant to be educational, not to bash EVs.
With EVs becoming more popular, especially with Ford's upcoming EV platform, vehicles will start to weigh more for their size. The video below was sent to me by a buddy who works at the Alabama Department of Transportation. It was provided by the guardrail manufacturer.
“Normal” roadside hardware is rated at Test Level 3 (TL-3). TL-3 is cars and trucks impacting under various conditions at 100 kmh (~62 miles per hour). Bridge rails are usually rated TL-4, which is a single-unit box truck (think big U-Haul).
TL-5 is a tractor-trailer, and TL-6 is a tanker tractor-trailer. He doesn't believe Alabama has a TL-5 or 6 placement, but we probably need one at a few places.
The Rivian impact in the video was 25 degrees at 62 mph. From the side view, the guardrail barely slowed it down. It not only vaulted the concrete, but it also dragged like 5 or 6 pieces of it. Each piece is roughly 2000 lbs!
Generally, the manufacturer is required by the various state DOTs to have run and passed all required tests. Each test is like $100k to run, and most products require 6 or 7 tests. If they fail any of them, they MUST modify the product and restart testing from scratch.
This is a great explanation for those wondering why states charge an "EV" fee to make up for lost gas tax revenue. EVs simply have a heavier impact on road infrastructure. The standards will need to change, and the states will have to spend money to upgrade their safety equipment.
With EVs becoming more popular, especially with Ford's upcoming EV platform, vehicles will start to weigh more for their size. The video below was sent to me by a buddy who works at the Alabama Department of Transportation. It was provided by the guardrail manufacturer.
“Normal” roadside hardware is rated at Test Level 3 (TL-3). TL-3 is cars and trucks impacting under various conditions at 100 kmh (~62 miles per hour). Bridge rails are usually rated TL-4, which is a single-unit box truck (think big U-Haul).
TL-5 is a tractor-trailer, and TL-6 is a tanker tractor-trailer. He doesn't believe Alabama has a TL-5 or 6 placement, but we probably need one at a few places.
The Rivian impact in the video was 25 degrees at 62 mph. From the side view, the guardrail barely slowed it down. It not only vaulted the concrete, but it also dragged like 5 or 6 pieces of it. Each piece is roughly 2000 lbs!
Generally, the manufacturer is required by the various state DOTs to have run and passed all required tests. Each test is like $100k to run, and most products require 6 or 7 tests. If they fail any of them, they MUST modify the product and restart testing from scratch.
This is a great explanation for those wondering why states charge an "EV" fee to make up for lost gas tax revenue. EVs simply have a heavier impact on road infrastructure. The standards will need to change, and the states will have to spend money to upgrade their safety equipment.
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