Trauma-buffer: Difference between revisions
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==Notes== | ==Notes== | ||
* Modern automobiles are "designed to fail" during accidents in much this same way as a safety feature, in contrast to older "more durable" steel-bodied cars which might suffer little damage in an accident, but | * Modern automobiles are "designed to fail" during accidents in much this same way as a safety feature, in contrast to older "more durable" steel-bodied cars which might suffer little damage in an accident, but {{w|Whiplash (medicine)|translated the entire force}} to the driver. ''That's neat!'' | ||
* Outside of ''Transformers'', the term "trauma buffer" refers to an unrelated concept in developmental psychology. A child's ability to handle <small>(appropriately enough)</small> ''emotional'' whiplash. | * Outside of ''Transformers'', the term "trauma buffer" refers to an unrelated concept in developmental psychology. A child's ability to handle <small>(appropriately enough)</small> ''emotional'' whiplash. | ||
[[Category:Generation 1 Transformer anatomy]] | [[Category:Generation 1 Transformer anatomy]] | ||
Revision as of 12:41, 11 September 2018
- Trauma-buffers are a technology used in Transformer bodies.

On a Transformer body, trauma-buffers are plates which are used to protect delicate mechanical joints and servos from sheering pressure during sharp impact.
The mechanism used by trauma-buffers to provide protection is not clear. Their two-level construction suggests they may be sacrificial; designed to fail or shatter when a force exceeds a structural limit rather than translating that impact to the joint.
Fiction
IDW Generation 1 continuity
On the planet Nebulos, Ultra Magnus recognized the combination of servos, trauma-buffers and cydraulics within an augmented Nebulan as Cybertronian technology. Spotlight: Ultra Magnus
Notes
- Modern automobiles are "designed to fail" during accidents in much this same way as a safety feature, in contrast to older "more durable" steel-bodied cars which might suffer little damage in an accident, but translated the entire force to the driver. That's neat!
- Outside of Transformers, the term "trauma buffer" refers to an unrelated concept in developmental psychology. A child's ability to handle (appropriately enough) emotional whiplash.

