Crumple - meaning and definition. What is Crumple
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What (who) is Crumple - definition

STRUCTURAL FEATURE USED IN AUTOMOBILES AND RECENTLY INCORPORATED INTO RAILCARS
Crumple zones; Crumple Zone; Crumple Zones; Crush zone; Crush belt; Deformation zone
  • Cross section to show the different strength of the metal in a [[Saab 9000]]. The safety cell is in stronger metal (red) compared to the crumple zones (yellow).
  • Range shown in blue of East Japan Railways (JR East) E217 series train. The driver's cabin is a crushable/crumple zone).
  • A [[crash test]] illustrates how a crumple zone absorbs energy from an impact.
  • Transport Research Laboratory]]

crumple         
Crumpled; Crumpled paper; Crumple
(crumples, crumpling, crumpled)
1.
If you crumple something such as paper or cloth, or if it crumples, it is squashed and becomes full of untidy creases and folds.
She crumpled the paper in her hand...
The front and rear of the car will crumple during a collision.
VERB: V n, V
Crumple up means the same as crumple
.
She crumpled up her coffee cup...
Nancy looked at the note angrily, then crumpled it up and threw it in a nearby wastepaper basket.
PHRASAL VERB: V P n (not pron), V n P
crumpled
His uniform was crumpled, untidy, splashed with mud.
ADJ
2.
If someone crumples, they collapse, for example when they have received a shock. (WRITTEN)
His body crumpled...
He immediately crumpled to the floor...
Chance McAllister lay crumpled on the floor.
VERB: V, V prep, V-ed
crumple         
Crumpled; Crumpled paper; Crumple
v. a.
Wrinkle, rumple.
crumple         
Crumpled; Crumpled paper; Crumple
¦ verb
1. crush or become crushed so as to become creased and wrinkled.
2. suddenly lose force, effectiveness, or composure.
¦ noun a crushed fold, crease, or wrinkle.
Derivatives
crumply adjective
Origin
ME: from obs. crump 'make or become curved', from OE crump 'bent, crooked', of W. Gmc origin.

Wikipedia

Crumple zone

Crumple zones, crush zones, or crash zones are a structural safety feature used in vehicles, mainly in automobiles, to increase the time over which a change in velocity (and consequently momentum) occurs from the impact during a collision by a controlled deformation; in recent years, it is also incorporated into trains and railcars.

Crumple zones are designed to increase the time over which the total force from the change in momentum is applied to an occupant, as the average force applied to the occupants is inversely related to the time over which it is applied. The physics involved can be expressed by the equation:

F avg Δ t = m Δ v {\displaystyle F_{\text{avg}}\Delta t=m\Delta v}

where F {\displaystyle F} is the force, t {\displaystyle t} is the time, m {\displaystyle m} is the mass, and v {\displaystyle v} is the velocity of the body. In SI units, force is measured in Newtons, time in seconds, mass in kilograms, velocity in metres per second, and the resulting impulse is measured in newton seconds (N⋅s).

Typically, crumple zones are located in the front part of the vehicle, to absorb the impact of a head-on collision, but they may be found on other parts of the vehicle as well. According to a British Motor Insurance Repair Research Centre study of where on the vehicle impact damage occurs, 65% were front impacts, 25% rear impacts, 5% left-side, and 5% right-side. Some racing cars use aluminium, composite/carbon fibre honeycomb, or energy absorbing foam to form an impact attenuator that dissipates crash energy using a much smaller volume and lower weight than road car crumple zones. Impact attenuators have also been introduced on highway maintenance vehicles in some countries.

On September 10, 2009, the ABC News programs Good Morning America and World News showed a U.S. Insurance Institute for Highway Safety crash test of a 2009 Chevrolet Malibu in an offset head-on collision with a 1959 Chevrolet Bel Air sedan. It dramatically demonstrated the effectiveness of modern car safety design over 1950s design, particularly of rigid passenger safety cells and crumple zones.

Examples of use of Crumple
1. But Miss Knight, 41, refused to crumple into a meringue of despair.
2. The children helped crumple paper to plug holes in nearby pipes that housed roaches and rats.
3. "Safety is more than crumple zones and air bags," said a Volvo spokesman.
4. Others crumple leaves and use them as sponges to sop drinking water from tree hollows.
5. In barely ten seconds I am utterly won over by this crumple–faced caricature of a sex god.