Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Just another thought on higher vehicles being safer for kids. . My daughter hit a eight point buck at 50 mph this weekend. As I drove it into the body shop yesterday for a estimate. A Toyota Camery had a much worse outcome. A deer went through the windshield. Inside is a bio hazzard. Is saving a few gallons of gas worth having a deer go through your kids windshield??
If the buck your daughter hit was mid-leap the same thing would have happened to her. Stop being smug about a car wreck you know nothing about. And watch out for actual children, which is the danger inherent in higher vehicles.
Odd take . The same person wrote both estimates. We had a nice conversation about cars vs suvs and trucks with deer hits. I guess you know more than body shops in Loudoun.
Nothing you said even responds to my "take." A buck can easily go through the windshield of a Wrangler if it is off the ground at the moment of impact. That's not odd, it's physics. But since you can easily be buttered up by a guy writing an estimate into writing a self-congratulatory post about how safe Wranglers are for inexperienced drivers I'm not sure that it makes sense to expect you to understand basic concepts.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Just another thought on higher vehicles being safer for kids. . My daughter hit a eight point buck at 50 mph this weekend. As I drove it into the body shop yesterday for a estimate. A Toyota Camery had a much worse outcome. A deer went through the windshield. Inside is a bio hazzard. Is saving a few gallons of gas worth having a deer go through your kids windshield??
If the buck your daughter hit was mid-leap the same thing would have happened to her. Stop being smug about a car wreck you know nothing about. And watch out for actual children, which is the danger inherent in higher vehicles.
Odd take . The same person wrote both estimates. We had a nice conversation about cars vs suvs and trucks with deer hits. I guess you know more than body shops in Loudoun.
Nothing you said even responds to my "take." A buck can easily go through the windshield of a Wrangler if it is off the ground at the moment of impact. That's not odd, it's physics. But since you can easily be buttered up by a guy writing an estimate into writing a self-congratulatory post about how safe Wranglers are for inexperienced drivers I'm not sure that it makes sense to expect you to understand basic concepts.
Anonymous wrote:Jeeps aren't the most stable but I'll take them in a crash over most cars - they are built on a very solid frame. Someone rearended us on the highway - their car was totaled. Our Jeep was fine except for small scratch on tow hook. Just don't drive them like a sports car. And they are awesome in snow, rough terrain, high water
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Just another thought on higher vehicles being safer for kids. . My daughter hit a eight point buck at 50 mph this weekend. As I drove it into the body shop yesterday for a estimate. A Toyota Camery had a much worse outcome. A deer went through the windshield. Inside is a bio hazzard. Is saving a few gallons of gas worth having a deer go through your kids windshield??
If the buck your daughter hit was mid-leap the same thing would have happened to her. Stop being smug about a car wreck you know nothing about. And watch out for actual children, which is the danger inherent in higher vehicles.
Odd take . The same person wrote both estimates. We had a nice conversation about cars vs suvs and trucks with deer hits. I guess you know more than body shops in Loudoun.
55.Anonymous wrote:What was the speed limit?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Just another thought on higher vehicles being safer for kids. . My daughter hit a eight point buck at 50 mph this weekend. As I drove it into the body shop yesterday for a estimate. A Toyota Camery had a much worse outcome. A deer went through the windshield. Inside is a bio hazzard. Is saving a few gallons of gas worth having a deer go through your kids windshield??
If the buck your daughter hit was mid-leap the same thing would have happened to her. Stop being smug about a car wreck you know nothing about. And watch out for actual children, which is the danger inherent in higher vehicles.
Anonymous wrote:You are lucky that her silly Wrangler did not flip or something, that car is not that stable.

Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Just another thought on higher vehicles being safer for kids. . My daughter hit a eight point buck at 50 mph this weekend. As I drove it into the body shop yesterday for a estimate. A Toyota Camery had a much worse outcome. A deer went through the windshield. Inside is a bio hazzard. Is saving a few gallons of gas worth having a deer go through your kids windshield??
If the buck your daughter hit was mid-leap the same thing would have happened to her. Stop being smug about a car wreck you know nothing about. And watch out for actual children, which is the danger inherent in higher vehicles.