Aglifter wrote:
For controlled failure points, metal makes sense - although I could be wrong about that.
Metal, specifically steel, makes the most sense of any material we use, unless we make wooden cars.
1. Cheap and abundant. There is enough steel to allow us to make all the cars we use. If you start using aluminum, polymers, composites, it will be mind-boggling expensive and there will be a limited supply.
2. Easy to form. With any material that could replace metal in cars, the processes do not easily lend themselves to large scale production. You can stamp out car doors from steel, cheap, fast, and with consistent quality. You can not stamp out composites and high strength polymers and still guarantee their strength and integrity unless you test each one individually. Not economically feasible.
3. Fatigue. Steel has this wonderful quality that below a certain stress, it does not suffer from metal fatigue. If you use aluminum, plastics, composites, the cars will have a fatigue life. This will mean cars will require inspection for fatigue, or next thing you know, you will drive down the street and your car will crack in half. Most people can not get their oil changed on time. Cars prone to fatigue is asking for trouble.
4. Isotropy. Steel has another wonderful quality. It has the same strength regardless of direction. Composites do not. With the kind of abuse cars take, you will have delamination and all sorts of other failures.
The fact is that if you build and maintain cars like airplanes, you can make the F1 race cars, at the price of airplanes and race cars. If you make cars that people can afford and will stand up to the daily abuse they have to take, you are locked into using steel.
On top of that, cars are not just transportation devices. They are status symbols, escapes for the frustrations of life, entertainment, etc. you can make a 2000 lbs car of steel that will comfortably seat 4 people. But it will not be well met. If we use the analogy that cars are ships, most people are expecting something like a cruise ship, where they are very isolated from the reality of them being on a machine. If you build a 2000 lbs car, it will be like a warship. It will have all the creature comforts, but it will have conduits exposed and it will be impossible to pretend a car is a lounge chair on wheels. People are vain, stupid, illogical and a car that is guided by choices that were purely technical will fail in the market.