What is going on at automotive design college?

What is going on at automotive design college?

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Discussion

Jon39

Original Poster:

13,375 posts

150 months

Thursday 29th August
quotequote all

driving Driving along, then suddenly spun into the undergrowth.


Edited by Jon39 on Friday 30th August 10:33

ds666

2,798 posts

186 months

Thursday 29th August
quotequote all
Doesn't a rectangle with sides at the correct ration 1.61ish:1 conform to the Golden Ratio ?
So they are still teaching the same thing , but getting lazy in its use ?

Peterpetrole

304 posts

4 months

Thursday 29th August
quotequote all
I don't see anything similar in the quoted designs above.

And that's not the only ways a golden rectangle / golden ratio would be applied, there's plenty of other design keys e.g. clusters of three look better than two or four, logos centered on intersecting ligns.

Although I certainly don't agree with all of his tastes, Frank Stephens on YT gives good insight on how this stuff comes together.

quench

527 posts

153 months

Thursday 29th August
quotequote all
Jon39 said:
The students left college and we now see the results.
Jon, I hate to burst your bubble, but the Americans have been ahead of the curve for a long time, and were producing these designs before the current college kids' parents were even a gleam in their parents' eyes!





ian in lancs

3,821 posts

205 months

Friday 30th August
quotequote all
crumple zones and/or pedestrian/cyclist etal safety? Spread force over a greater area?

FA57REN

1,090 posts

62 months

Friday 30th August
quotequote all
ian in lancs said:
crumple zones and/or pedestrian/cyclist etal safety? Spread force over a greater area?
I believe the preferred mechanism for protecting pedestrians in an impact is to "scoop' them onto the bonnet, rather than slamming them with a vertical slab of metal and plastic backed by an engine.

thepritch

1,098 posts

172 months

Tuesday 3rd September
quotequote all
FA57REN said:
I believe the preferred mechanism for protecting pedestrians in an impact is to "scoop' them onto the bonnet, rather than slamming them with a vertical slab of metal and plastic backed by an engine.
Yes, there is now a requirement that for a certain region across the bumper, the lowest point of the bumpers (in height) must also be the furthest forward. You can’t just sculpt a surface back and under to the wheel arch - which is why most cars have a ‘splitter’ type effect on those lower edges to protrude as far forwards.