Which kind of crash does it need for a car to catch fire?
I'm asking because I was discussing about an accident where a car crashed into a full-grown brown bear. Is it realistic under normal circumstances that the car catched fire?
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Which kind of crash does it need for a car to catch fire? I'm asking because I was discussing about an accident where a car crashed into a full-grown brown bear. Is it realistic under normal circumstances that the car catched fire? |
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Three things are required, fuel,oxygen and a source of ignition. Since around 1978 when the burning Pinto issued appeared manufacturers have tried to design vehicles that limit the three from occuring together. Cars bursting into flames after an accident is a pretty rare event. THese stats I got from the NFPA website. Only 3% of vehicle fires are the result of a collision or rollover. Almost half (49%) were the result of mechanical failure,leaks or worn out parts.Electrical isses caused 23% of the fires. So looking at all the data in a well mainted vehicle it is possible but not likely. |
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If the question is "what can cause a car to catch on fire" rather than "what can cause a spectacular movie-style explosion", then things are a little more wide open! Remember that the car runs by burning gasoline inside of a metal box (the engine) - things therefore get quite hot in the normal course of operation, and a good deal of engineering has been devoted to making sure that that heat is dissipated safely. Lots of things can go wrong and cause the simple heat of running an engine to start a fire or at least make things very smoky and scary for a while.
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It is possible, though very unlikely, to create an explosion multiple factors are required. A. A nearly empty gas tank. (Gasoline by itself is not explosive, the vapors are) B. A failure of the venting system, allows the vapors to build. C. A rupture of the fuel tank, allowing the fuel vapors and oxygen to mix to the right ratio to allow combustion. D. Some sort of spark or flame that exists at the same time that the ratio is correct. Thats off the top of my head. |
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Any accident that causes the fuel system to rupture could potentially cause a fire. Petrol/Gasoline vapour is highly flammable, and sparks are frequently present in a crash situation (e.g. metal scraping along the road surface). The tank on most passenger cars is underneath the rear of the vehicle, with a combination of metal and rubber hoses to get the fuel to the engine - it is easy for one or more of these to become dislodged in a heavy impact, or for the tank itself to be ruptured. |
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