Nature's Fury - Hail Stones Ate my Car!
Posted: Wed Mar 24, 2010 9:58 am
I'm in Perth, Australia and the weather here is almost always nice. But on Monday afternoon I was in the middle of a hail storm more severe than anything I've ever seen. Hail stones about 40mm to 80mm across were smashing down for about 5 minutes breaking windows, roofs and wrecking cars - including mine. Even clay roof tiles were broken on some homes.
I know Britain gets regularly pelted with wild storms but I never thought I'd see it here. At least now I know how you feel.
My car is/was a Subaru Impreza and it has hundreds of dents all over the upper facing metalwork. However, the plastic bumpers are unmarked. They took the punishment and simply bounced back. This is not really surprising but it puts a new slant on the concern about modern cars being too 'plasticy' and not made like they used to be. For this type of impact, plastic is ideal.
Also, rear windscreens were far more likely to break than front ones. I guess front windscreens are deliberately made tougher. The carpark had smashed glass and indicator light covers everywhere. Even some wing mirrors were taken clean off!
And amazingly, there have been no serious injuries reported so far. Everyone outside must have run for cover.
I know Britain gets regularly pelted with wild storms but I never thought I'd see it here. At least now I know how you feel.
My car is/was a Subaru Impreza and it has hundreds of dents all over the upper facing metalwork. However, the plastic bumpers are unmarked. They took the punishment and simply bounced back. This is not really surprising but it puts a new slant on the concern about modern cars being too 'plasticy' and not made like they used to be. For this type of impact, plastic is ideal.
Also, rear windscreens were far more likely to break than front ones. I guess front windscreens are deliberately made tougher. The carpark had smashed glass and indicator light covers everywhere. Even some wing mirrors were taken clean off!
And amazingly, there have been no serious injuries reported so far. Everyone outside must have run for cover.