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SVTPerformance's Chain of Restaurants
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Are Lamborghini Aventadors held by superglue??
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<blockquote data-quote="Torch10th" data-source="post: 13487362" data-attributes="member: 15703"><p>This. The car did exactly what it was engineered to do. The aft section of the car breaks away from the safety cell in the front, dissociating forces to keep them away from the driver.</p><p></p><p>It's no different from seeing F1 cars purposely break apart during a crash.</p><p></p><p>In insurance speak, this crash likely has some comparable negligence to deal with. The driver that hit the Aventador did not yield right of way. however the Aventador appears to be traveling at a high rate of speed which may have contributed to creating the crash in the first place.</p><p></p><p>Even if the insurance companies ruled 50% liability on both ends, that really sucks for the driver of the mazda. Most people don't carry around liability policies large enough to take car of even half that car.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Torch10th, post: 13487362, member: 15703"] This. The car did exactly what it was engineered to do. The aft section of the car breaks away from the safety cell in the front, dissociating forces to keep them away from the driver. It's no different from seeing F1 cars purposely break apart during a crash. In insurance speak, this crash likely has some comparable negligence to deal with. The driver that hit the Aventador did not yield right of way. however the Aventador appears to be traveling at a high rate of speed which may have contributed to creating the crash in the first place. Even if the insurance companies ruled 50% liability on both ends, that really sucks for the driver of the mazda. Most people don't carry around liability policies large enough to take car of even half that car. [/QUOTE]
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Are Lamborghini Aventadors held by superglue??
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