well since the truck is a lot heavier the force of the truck will damage the car terribly and then with the force it would push the car back which will make that car hit another car and so on eventually this chain will continue if something stops It or the truck (since so large) will not see the car causing it to go on top of the car and damaging eventually killing the person inside the car
There is no false statement accompanying the question.
In accident reconstructions, head on collisions where equal mass vehicles come to a stop on impact are virtually nonexistent. Physics says the much lighter vehicle should be carried backwards by the heavier one, but it never happens, the smaller car will go underneath or off to the side Not sure. All I know is that there wouldn't be a tiny car for very long... ^_^
If they collide head on, the wreckage will remain at the point of impact (real world considerations aside).
mini cooper
It depends on your speed and the age of the child. If you are going faster than 40 MPH upon impact, there is a very low chance of survival. If you knock the child at 2 MPH or slower, they'll get nothing but a bump on the head.
Either a warped head and blown headgasket or a cracked head. An intake gaslet will also blow and let it in on a 4.3. I had it happen.
34ms
When two tectonic plates collide with each other. If they collide, they usually slide under each other, causing a tsunami. However, If the collide head on, ground is pushed upward, creating a volcano'mountain
A big crash and two very broken bowling balls.
An aeroplane heading into a head wind will use up more fuel, than when flying down wind.
Not likely
nothing will happen. I have attempted to replace a head gasket on my truck, and when i had finished, i tried to start it, and all that would happen was it would try to turn over, but never quite get there, So i had looked up the firing order again, and it fired right up, and im still driving it. good luck