Originally Posted by
GreatChecko
That is true, but no car is going to keep a passenger from being injured at very high speeds. You are implying that an unbelted passenger should not be injured when they hit any part of the car's interior going 60 or 80 miles per hour.
Nothing in an aircraft can be considered a sudden stop or a 30-40 MPH accident, especially when any deceleration is from 200 MPH plus. The seat and the seatbelt is what is going to protect the passenger in that situation. Unless you want to trade accident survivability because everything in the cabin in frangible, thus a potential deadly projectile, or make it a huge padded room, I can't think of a way to design the cabin to absorb a body decelerating from those speeds.
This is apples and oranges.
Checko
Do you design airplane interiors and are you a safety expert who has spent the needed time and hours to research this?
We used to think the world was flat and that there was no such thing as electricity- let's not research something and write it off because we can't come up with a simple solution in 5 minutes.