|
Autoliv has revealed two new
airbag applications specifically for Sport Utility Vehicles (SUVs):
the Front Edge Airbag designed to mitigate the effects of an SUV
colliding with a pedestrian, and the Bumper Airbag, which addresses
the problem of such high-hood vehicles colliding with passenger cars. |
|
“Based on the crash tests, it
is estimated that this new airbag could save hundreds of lives every
year in the United States alone,” stated Autoliv.
The Bumper Airbag for SUVs also
enhances pedestrian safety by deploying from beneath the bumper to
protect the pedestrian’s legs. “In tests, the violence to the lower
legs of the pedestrian dummy was reduced by more than 50% to levels
within the criteria set by the EuroNCAP rating agency in their
pedestrian protection tests,” revealed Autoliv.
“However, the most important
application of the bag will probably be in crashes when there is a
mismatch in the height of the vehicles, especially when an SUV or
other high-profile vehicle ‘Tbones’ a passenger car. In these side-impact
collisions, the front of the SUV typically hits above the sill and
the energy-absorbing structure of the passenger car, resulting in
critical intrusions into the passenger compartment and, in some
instances,
even collapse of the protection cage around the car’s occupants.”
Crash data indicated that the risk of death in such crashes was
between 27 and 48 times higher in a passenger car than in another
SUV, according to Autoliv.
The 1.5-m (4.9-ft) long,
tubular Bumper Airbag has also been evaluated in computer
simulations and real crash tests. Mounted under the bumper of a Ford
Explorer that was run head-on into the side of a typical passenger
car at 48 km/h (30 mph), the bag inflation started 80 milliseconds
before the impact, using a pre-crash sensor, and the bag’s
loadcarrying structure swung into position.
“The intrusions were
significantly less at all measuring points with the Bumper Airbag.
At the level of the head of an occupant, the reduction was as much
as 40%. An added benefit indicated by the tests was that the time
available to inflate the side airbags of the passenger car could be
increased when the SUV is equipped with a bumper bag,” stated
Autoliv.
Stuart Birch |
|
“The fatality risk for
pedestrians is 2.5 times higher in SUV impacts than it is for
regular cars,” stated Autoliv, when announcing new developments at
the Enhanced Safety of Vehicles conference in Lyons, France.
“Another difference is the impact area. While most pedestrians
killed by passenger cars perish when they hit their heads on the
hood or windshield area of the car, the majority of severe injuries
to pedestrians caused by SUVs occur when the front hood edge hits
the pedestrian’s chest and abdomen. Autoliv has therefore developed
an airbag to address this problem. Triggered by a precrash sensor (such
as radar), the airbag deploys a few milliseconds before a pedestrian
impact.”
The
company explained that the system had been tested in both computer
simulations and in real crash tests, involving crash dummies
representing an average male and a very short female. In the
simulations, the Front Edge Airbag had demonstrated its ability to
pass EuroNCAP requirements. In the full-scale tests, the airbag had
decreased all critical-injury values “considerably,” the largest
reduction being for the abdomen of the male dummy. Injury risk was
reduced from 99% to only 3% when using the Front Edge Airbag. The
test velocity was 40 km/h (25 mph), described as being the average
impact speed in fatal pedestrian accidents. |