Andres125sx wrote:A tilted pillar that must take a vertical load applied at its end will never resist as much as a vertical pillar receiving the same load.
Ehem, that's simply not true. I'm with Cold Fussion here (nice to meet you, Cold), and even not taking in account that a car that rolls is usually moving forward, so no pillars work as columns, let's assume for a moment they do.
If they are columns, then you have to take in account slenderness. Simple:
usually, a slender column working in compression fails before a similarly slender cantilever does. That's why complex beams are made of inclined members with few members in a vertical position, to diminish the possibility of buckling.
A cantilever flexes more (actually, four times as much as a simply supported beam) but a slender column develops buckling because... Euler.
Euler buckling modes for vertical slender columns
Besides, you dismiss cantilevers as if they were worse than non-cantilevered beams. Again, that's not true: it depends.
For example, as opposed to simply supported beams, a properly constructed cantilevered beam (with cantilevered ends, affixed to the supports) reduces maximum moments around 45%.
If w is the load per length, L is the length of the beam, you create supports at L/6 and the simple beam is reduced to 2L/3, then you go from a maximum moment of wL^2/8 to 5wL^2/72.
Look, ma! I reduced the moment! No hands, just a cantilever!
As far as I know, there is no structural issues for rollovers in convertibles. The structural issue with them is that the chassis instead of being a box, by virtue of having no roof becomes more like a sheet of metal (the floor).
This means that the chassis has poor properties for torque resistance and thus they are not as good sporting cars as more rigid structures, among other things.
Finally, you say that you are not bothered by "if it´s really needed or not". Actually, that's a crucial point in engineering. In the same way that you do not accept homeopathy as a solution instead of regular medicines (it's not ethic!) you do not (usually, of course) create unneeded solutions.
I'm not saying that rollovers are or are not an issue on convertibles, I'm only saying that it's a perfectly valid question that could be answered.