Bulk head?
Are you seriously suggesting the bulk head would stop a tank full of 350ltrs or more of water in a crash at 40mph + if you are then you're nuts
Of course, remember the tank is baffled, plus if it's a flat tank then of course it'll be safe, my bulk head is solid as a rock, thick solid metal, stop being a turd and go and work for health and safety. Drive safe allow for stopping distances, and all will be well.
Bulk heads are designed to embrace impact. A water tank will not go through a bulk head unless it had a lot of space to fly and smash through it. Even so it would only dent it. A flat tank would not have the force to even remotely bother a bulk head.
Personally, I wouldn't want to rely on a bulkhead. There is something that you don't seem to have considered. Supposing you collide with another vehicle or run someone over. The police would be all over you like a rash. They could easily allege that you didn't break as hard as you would have if the tank had been fitted professionally. They might just about be able to swing that in a courtroom too. If death occurred, it could go as far as a manslaughter rap (worst case scenario admittedly). So it's not just about whether the bulkhead would protect you. It's also about whether you would hurt someone else by not applying the brakes as fully as possible.
Yes, we can all drive carefully. I always have respect for any load I'm carrying. But it only takes one idiot out there or even another good driver having a bad day...
I really didn't want to get into the pro-fit v DIY but...
How would a crash tested system fare any differently to a DIY one in a collision for someone outside (ie not the driver or passenger)
Same weight on.
Same brakes.
Same reaction time.
Same breaking distance.
Same stopping distance.
Not a post-a genuine question.
I've had both DIY & Pro-fit systems so no axe to grind either.
Hi Poleking. Perhaps I didn't explain my thoughts very well. My thinking was that if a driver knows that their tank is a DIY with ratchet straps or mainly relying on a bulkhead, the self-preservation instinct could be to not apply the brakes fully. This could be the difference between (a) having or not having a collision OR (b) having a collision at a faster speed than would otherwise be the case. Even if the brakes were fully applied, the police could allege that the driver may have held back in order to preserve his own skin. Either way, a prosecution lawyer could make some sort of case.
I first came across something analogous to this some years ago (pre-WFP days). I had a girlfriend who wouldn't use her seatbelt when she was a passenger in my vehicle. She used the argument that it was her choice. 'Fair enough' I thought, it's her fine too. Then one day I needed to make an emergency stop with her in the passenger seat. She managed to avoid banging her head on the windscreen - just. When I braked, I was tring to get a balance between not hurting her and not hurting the person in the road. Luckily, I avoided both scenarios. My braking was compromised by my knowledge that she wasn't wearing her seatbelt. In the immediate aftermath, she was still complaining about wearing the belt (yes, I've known some right nutters). I switched off the engine and refused to budge until she either removed herself from the vehicle or put her belt on. She put her belt on.
EDIT: I'm not suggesting that anyone pays out for all those bells and whistles on their system - many of them unnecessary. I'm just suggesting that at least ensure that the tank part is installed professionally. It doesn't even have to be a WFP supplier - just an engineering company that has the knowledge, tools and equipment.
Seems like you've thought about it mate.
I get where you're coming from, but politely disagree.
My point of view would be to slam my anchors on as hard as I could because the impact would cause more damage than braking would.
Agreed-it is a case of driving for the load carried.
Interesting how all the crash tests on youtube, Ionics, and (is it?) pure2o never show an unsecured load and a decent bulkhead. Someone posted videos in this thread. A weighty unsecured load stopped at the bulkhead of a decent enough looking bulkhead. And something the weight of a box of tissues going through a poxy bulkhead.
Vans-the bulkhead in an expert/scudo/dispatch May as we'll be made of 3mm ply and held in with duct tape. Vivaro/Trafic/primastar a lot better. And the Vito, rock solid.
Personal experience of all 3.
My personal gripe is that the noodles in a van are 'designed to secure the load the van is safe to carry'. So should be fine.
A 'crash tested system'-the installers have virtually no comeback in the event of an accident.
Are you more likely to survive a crash if you have a 'crash tested' system?
There is no evidence to support this. Literally none.
There certainly is enough marketing BS to lead one to believe that one would though.