The translation of your sentence seems a bit unclear and may contain some grammatical errors or mistranslations. However, here is a direct translation: "Hotfix rhinestone British couple driving into the hundred me" This sentence appears to be a mix of terms and doesn't form a coherent meaning in English. Could you clarify or provide more context? For example, "hotfix rhinestone" might refer to a type of decorative stone that can be applied with heat, and "British couple" refers to a couple from Britain, but the rest of the sentence is ambiguous. If you meant something different, please provide more details!

by lidgen7nt on 2012-02-08 16:37:01

Sunk in the deep car has been completely scrapped. Bradley's wife was eventually rescued, according to the "Daily Mail" report on June 11th. A British couple drove through a highway fence post and, after a freefall escape from death in a great catastrophe, only suffered minor injuries. Are they really "God’s people"? In fact, it was luck that allowed this couple to escape from death in such an incredible catastrophe, unbelievable survivors and...

The event involved a car falling from a hundred-meter height near Llanbedr in the United Kingdom. The 58-year-old bodybuilder Bradley Bill and his 57-year-old wife Dottie were driving along the central Welsh coast between Machynlleth and Aberystwyth in a hurry. As it was late, Bill’s car was driving faster imperceptibly. Suddenly, a car in front of them slammed its brakes for some reason.

"My brain went blank, I only knew to hit the brakes," Bill later told rescuers describing the scene at that time. But the car failed to stop. After crashing, Bill and his wife's car broke through the highway guardrail and plummeted hundreds of meters into the sky.

The car first fell freely into a canyon, then hit a big tree, finally landing in a pond at the bottom of a waterfall. Luckily, they only had minor injuries. Bill had a fractured clavicle but still insisted on pulling his wife out of the car. She said: "We must be the luckiest people in the world. I had fainted, just remembering the car flipping and the sound of metal collisions."

Rescue personnel said no one believed they had any chance of survival. The place where the car crashed was beside rock pools, only 2 meters away; if they had fallen there, they would have died. This is absolutely a miracle. After the collision, they only had small wounds, which is hardly believable.

At present, experts generally agree that a fall from a height of 40 meters can be fatal. According to the theorem of kinetic energy, MGH = 1/2mv^2. V comes out to be about 100m/s. In Ft = MV, F represents the force acting on water, F = MV/T (time hypothesis, assuming 0.1s, with Bradley couples each weighing 75kg). The force is monstrous. F = 75000N, which is equivalent to 100 times the weight of Bradley and his wife. Currently, even the best astronaut can withstand only 10 times their own weight. Therefore, the basic result should be death.

However, thanks to force analysis, or rather what is key part of the ground. For example, Bradley's couple's car crashed into a tree, thus slowing down the free fall speed, possibly changing the landing direction, and then falling into the pool formed by the Valley Falls. Water can deform, so it provides a momentary impulse. If they had fallen next to the rocks, they wouldn't have survived. So the conclusion is: specific calculations are only references, the key lies in the impact process, which is very complex and related to many factors, such as contact surface.

Extending another unbelievable survivor story: In 1972, 23 years before Yugoslavia, airline stewardess Vesna Vulović rapidly fell from a height of 33,000 feet without a parachute. The Serbia JAT Flight 367 over Srbská Kamenice was attacked by a terrorist bomb ("Croatian National Movement" terrorist organization claimed responsibility for the deaths of all check-in staff except Vesna Vulović).

However, equally stunning as the terrorist attack was Vesna Vulović's unscathed escape. Falling from 33,000 feet, her skull, legs, and 3 vertebrae were fractured, resulting in temporary paralysis, but after surgery, she returned to normal and continued her work as an airline stewardess. So far, she remains the Guinness record holder for surviving the longest free fall.