In reply to pimpm3 :
Thank you for your service.
That's so silly I bet Dubai police departments will buy them in bulk.
I thought the Carbon Motors E7 was a decent realistic attempt at a purpose-built police car, but even that was a bit too performance-oriented and expensive (and also it turned out to be a bit of a scam, but that's another matter).
I'd say a realistic purpose-built police car should have a reliable and efficient engine of average power (a through-the-road hybrid powertrain these days for efficiency and redundancy, plus it could use a KERS-type boost in pursuits), Subaru-style suspension (decent geometry and ride height and tough enough for a little offroading, while capable of fitting wide wheels to give decent grip on cheap/common tires), and lots of high-tech goodies, which is where the real gains are to be had - I think the biggest improvement would be a built-in computerized video system to replace the simple dashcam. The potential uses are so vast they're a bit scary.
You mean like in addition to pulling up a record of every thing I've ever done, also be able to verify I have insurance without me producing a stupid little paper card from my wallet? That technology is currently beyond state of the art.
Appleseed said:You mean like in addition to pulling up a record of every thing I've ever done, also be able to verify I have insurance without me producing a stupid little paper card from my wallet? That technology is currently beyond state of the art.
I was thinking ALPR / optical car tracking and facial recognition run amok, passive radar tracking using wifi/bluetooth, things like that.
Pulling up your insurance info electronically? That'll come some time after the warp drive
I always thought that small quad copter drones would be extremely useful in a high speed chase. They could stay out of traffic, but low enough not to become airborne obstruction. They could tail the suspect, and relay info to squad cars.
You're right, as drones with onboard neural accelerators come down in price (so that the drones can fly autonomously in urban environments) and battery efficiencies improve, something like that will happen. It'll probably be something that can transition from vertical to forward flight like a tiltrotor since vertical flight is less efficient and limits the top speed.
sergio said:In a chase I would bet the Hellcat would be crashed.
Into some unlucky bystanders no doubt...
jharry3 said:sergio said:In a chase I would bet the Hellcat would be crashed.
Into some unlucky bystanders no doubt...
Like at a Cars & Coffee event? That'd be funny in a sick sort of way.
jharry3 said:sergio said:In a chase I would bet the Hellcat would be crashed.
Into some unlucky bystanders no doubt...
iT JUST KEEPS HAPPENING
It's a good time today for police cars - Hemi Chargers, LS Tahoes, EcoBoost SUVs. I've felt the LS 6.0 Caprice was overlooked.
Heck, now even the ambulances have monster torque diesels.
For those of you who watched the 70's movie "Dirty Mary, Crazy Larry". You may recall a Dodge Polara with "an unlimited" top end. If you don't, now you need to watch it.
I think the military to LE transfer is through the 1033 program, as the military (as all govt departments) would have to either scrap or sell excess military vehicles through DRMO. This allows LE to acquire the vehicles at little to no cost. While I'm not a fan of the militarization of the police, the criminal element is driving this justification. If all Americans were boring and committed minor infractions, the police would not be able to justify the military equipment (and the cost).
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