Watching a car travel 40 miles per hour straight into a barrier often results in the car getting walloped, but what if that same car was going three times faster at 130 mph and then slams into a stationary bus? The results are indescribable, but we do get to see the scene unfold before our eyes courtesy of YouTube channel Bri4ka.

The video isn’t in English so it might be a little difficult to follow. Fortunately, the visuals that you’ll see are about as straightforward as they can get. The objective is clear, too. A remote-controlled second-generation Opel Omega and a decommissioned city bus are the sacrificial lambs in this test. At the very least, the test gives us a glimpse of what can happen if a car traveling twice the speed limit in the U.S. hits a parked city bus. Before you watch it, be advised that the results are unspeakably destructive.

You don't want to be involved in a crash like this

Before we dive into the spectacle of the crash, the video is a long one. It lasts almost 30 minutes and a good chunk of that time is spent explaining the science of speed. It doesn’t help that the video isn’t in English, but YouTube does have auto-generated subtitles so that goes a long way in understanding the entire episode from the very beginning.

Once all the science talk is done, the folks from Bri4ka proceed to prepare the second-generation Opel Omega and the decommissioned city bus that it’s going to crash into.

As the Omega was barrelling along the long runway, a radar gun was even employed and it Bri4ka} before colliding with the side of the city bus.

As far as the collision goes, well, it’s hard to put into words, especially the impact that the Omega caused. The impact tore through the bus completely. All the windows where shattered and the chassis was completely ripped apart.

And that was the impact on the bus, which came out of the crash in much better shape than the Omega. The German sedan, or at least what’s left of it, is beyond recognition. tagged the sedan going 129 mph.

The aftermath is just as jarring. Everything about the Omega turned into mangled metal, leaving only the truck as the only portion that’s still - partly, at least — recognizable. It’s a grizzly scene that we hope doesn’t end up happening in the real world.