Comparison of Frontal Crashes in Terms of Average Acceleration

2000-01-0880

3/6/2000

Authors
Abstract
Content
The paper presents a comparison between the acceleration pulses of vehicle-to-vehicle crash tests with those of different single-vehicle crash tests. The severity of the full frontal rigid barrier test is compared with that of the vehicle- to-vehicle crash test based on average acceleration and time-to-zero-velocity. Based on this a 30mph full frontal rigid barrier test is found equivalent to a 41mph vehicle-to-vehicle crash. A reduced speed of 22mph for full frontal rigid barrier test is found to represent vehicle-to- vehicle crashes with 50%-100% overlap, with each vehicle travelling at 30mph.
The paper also presents a comparison of the acceleration pulses from different crash tests based on the pulse shape and the pulse phase cross-correlation. None of the single-vehicle crash tests have been found to resemble vehicle-to-vehicle crashes in terms of the pulse shape and the pulse phase. The single-vehicle crash test closest to the vehicle-to-vehicle crash, in terms of pulse shape, is the offset rigid barrier test. The single-vehicle crash test, most distinct from the vehicle-to-vehicle crash, in terms of pulse phase, is the offset deformable barrier test.
Meta TagsDetails
DOI
https://doi.org/10.4271/2000-01-0880
Citation
Agaram, V., Xu, L., Wu, J., Kostyniuk, G., et al., "Comparison of Frontal Crashes in Terms of Average Acceleration," SAE 2000 World Congress, Detroit, Michigan, United States, March 6, 2000, https://doi.org/10.4271/2000-01-0880.
Additional Details
Publisher
Published
3/6/2000
Product Code
2000-01-0880
Content Type
Technical Paper
Language
English