Forum Discussion
43 Replies
- notevenExplorer IIII heard about a guy that died in a super duty aluminum fire because he was wearing his seat belt.
- BigToeExplorerI'll try posting the link again, but in my limited internet experience, rv.net is one of the more difficult forums to post links on, for whatever reason.
Should the links attached still not work, then you can easily go to youtube directly, and type in 2016 Super Duty Fire in the search terms, and these videos should come up within the first 10 results. You are looking for the video from "worldcarfans", which was the third relevant result returned.
The first two YouTube search results purport to be videos, but they are merely slide shows of the same photos you've already seen from Autoblog's website, presented with a "Ken Burns" effect of slow pans and dissolving transitions, set to loud music that I found obnoxious. Don't click on those... they represent what is sick about society... taking other people's still pictures, wrapping music and effects around them, and presenting them as "video" in order to harvest clicks and advertising dollars.
To my knowledge, there is only one REAL video that has been posted thus far of the incident. I imagine there was more than one video taken, but this is the only one I found. It includes the brightest explosion in front of the truck, discussed previously, at second mark 0:47.
The original raw video of the 2016 Super Duty fire
PS... I tested the link this time. It works as of this writing. If it doesn't work later, there is nothing I can do about it. - 45RicochetExplorer
Turtle n Peeps wrote:
BigToe wrote:
Turtle n Peeps wrote:
Sorry Ben, no "chemistry" took place. No cover up. No Government conspiracy. No crashed UFO's. No alien autopsy. None of that.
This is what happened right before the picture was taken.
Turtle N Peeps, in order to have any appreciation for your best guesses from afar based on your past life experience, we first have to wade through the condescending, know-it-all tone you posted them with..
The videos you posted showed a bumper shock explosion (Ford trucks don't have bumper shocks) and an air bag explosion. Rather than make inferences based on videos of other car fires, let's instead look at the video of the actual prototype Super Duty fire that we are discussing:
2016 Super Duty Aluminum Prototype burns to the ground
Well that was cool ^^^^. :B LOL Might want to fix your link. :S
LMAO That link was impressive! - Turtle_n_PeepsExplorer
BigToe wrote:
Turtle n Peeps wrote:
Sorry Ben, no "chemistry" took place. No cover up. No Government conspiracy. No crashed UFO's. No alien autopsy. None of that.
This is what happened right before the picture was taken.
Turtle N Peeps, in order to have any appreciation for your best guesses from afar based on your past life experience, we first have to wade through the condescending, know-it-all tone you posted them with..
The videos you posted showed a bumper shock explosion (Ford trucks don't have bumper shocks) and an air bag explosion. Rather than make inferences based on videos of other car fires, let's instead look at the video of the actual prototype Super Duty fire that we are discussing:
2016 Super Duty Aluminum Prototype burns to the ground
Well that was cool ^^^^. :B LOL Might want to fix your link. :S - BigToeExplorer
Turtle n Peeps wrote:
Sorry Ben, no "chemistry" took place. No cover up. No Government conspiracy. No crashed UFO's. No alien autopsy. None of that.
This is what happened right before the picture was taken.
Turtle N Peeps, in order to have any appreciation for your best guesses from afar based on your past life experience, we first have to wade through the condescending, know-it-all tone you posted them with..
The videos you posted showed a bumper shock explosion (Ford trucks don't have bumper shocks) and an air bag explosion. Rather than make inferences based on videos of other car fires, let's instead look at the video of the actual prototype Super Duty fire that we are discussing:
2016 Super Duty Aluminum Prototype burns to the ground - fly-boyExplorerI have no idea if the Ford "explosion" was caused by aluminum or not. I do know that if my truck catches on fire I want it to completely burn up and an explosion is an added bonus so long as no one is hurt.
Like Ford, I don't want to take the chance my insurance company might try to have it fixed. Its harder to find all of the parts after an explosion. :) - BenKExplorerThe only way to settle this is purposely set one on fire and we all stand around
poking at it till it explodes... :B
Am not stuck on this in either case...just wondering out loud why the
whole body burned down...where as other aluminum bodied fires I've
seen pictures of...shows the body pretty much in tact. Smaller too,
so closer to the engine fire. That then leads to another question...did
the bed also burn? As the report posted says the whole thing burned
down to the frame rails...why?
You folks living around me who bought one of these be careful to keep'm
garaged...there might be a mystery fire some night... ;)
Know too much about those bumper shocks...cousin quit as a Sargent in
Calif Highway Patrol back in the 80's
Always told his troopers to NOT walk between them after a crash...but
one trooper did...it destroyed both his knees and wheel chair bound
because artificial stuff wasn't that good back then. Wasn't a fire, but
they compressed and got stuck compressed...to release later with no
warning...
The straw that broke his back was after one accident and the mom was
yelling about her child...he found the lifeless infant underneath the
dash and was the day he quit... - Turtle_n_PeepsExplorer
rjstractor wrote:
BenK wrote:
These comments are my 'guesses' as to what 'most likely' took place
Again, as turtle pointed out, aluminum as most know it is stable and
does NOT burn easily. It will if the right circumstances are in place
I'm not a chemistry wizard, just a dumb fireman. It's my dumb fireman's guess that the explosive shower of sparks was caused by SRS components cooking off like Turtle thought, or possibly magnesium components. Magnesium burns spectacularly, as any firefighter who's attempted to extinguish a burning old-style VW engine block will attest.
Frame 19, look familiar? This is as close as it gets to Bens posted picture.
rjstractor thank you for your service. Be safe out there. - _40FanExplorerWas the trailer loaded with the new-easier filling DEF tanks?
- westendExplorerMy first thought, when seeing the photo of the explosion mentioned, that it looked like Magnesium in the mix, too. But, if you look closely, all of the white particles are whole, not giving off any energy (heat or light). My guess is an air bag exploding in it's stored location and what the white stuff is are components of the dashboard. In any event, it's an instantaneous pressure release and not caused by aluminum reacting. I'm with T&P, it's something going off with stored pressure.
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