Don't they train for this sort of thing when preparing for high speed pursuits?? My buddy is Seattle Gang Unit and he says they do.
If presented with equipment (car) failure at high speeds they go through specific steps to abort the chase and safely control the vehicle.
I still agree with you though, very sad <img src="/forums/images/graemlins/confused.gif" alt="" />
I find it surprising too..
I learned early by trial by fire <img src="/forums/images/graemlins/scared.gif" alt="" />
When I was a 16 year old kid working weekends at a service station, the owner handed me the keys to his '59 Pontiac Bonneville Tri Power (3 carburetors) 389 V-8. You old guys know this engine by the legendary 389 Pontiac GTO. He told me to go to the local hamburger hangout and get us some lunch. It didn't occur to him to mention the broken motor mount in the Pontiac.
As I was backing up in the parking lot, I put it in Drive and hit the accelerator a bit to start moving forward. The throttle on the 389 went wide open, burning rubber heading toward a brick wall about 75' away. Bearing down with both feet on the (lousy, par for the course in that era) brakes didn't even phase it..
Even as a young 16 year old, inexperienced driver, I had sense of mind to reach down and kill the ignition..
GM V-8s of this era up into the late '60s had a habit of the left side motor mount breaking (rubber separating from the steel mount, no captive steel to limit how far it would separate) allowing the left side of the engine to lift up and, the way the throttle linkage was set up, this would pull the throttle wide open.
GM got sued over this widely known problem, that they neglected to fix for a long time. I've talked to a number of people of that era that had GM vehicles and would take a short length of chain and loop it through the mount to keep the engine from lifting when the mount broke (again).