The Effect of Using the Same Tire Friction for Both Vehicles in Impact Speed Reconstructions
2021-01-0899
04/06/2021
- Features
- Event
- Content
- Most collision reconstructions implicitly assume the same tire/road friction coefficient for all vehicles, despite evidence that friction varies between tires, surfaces, and individual trials. Here we assess the errors introduced by an assumption of a single, universal friction coefficient when reconstructing a collision where vehicles actually had different tire frictions. We used Monte Carlo methods to generate 20,000 synthetic two-vehicle impacts and rest positions using different, randomized friction coefficients for each vehicle and randomized impact speeds. These rest positions were then used to reconstruct both vehicles’ impact speeds assuming a single, common friction coefficient. High and low bounds on the impact speeds were reconstructed using high and low bounds on the common friction. We found that more than 97% of the true impact speeds were in the ranges reconstructed using upper and lower friction bounds. The influence of the similar-friction assumption on the errors in the reconstructed speeds was secondary to the influence of using the wrong average friction for both of vehicles.
- Pages
- 19
- Citation
- Heinrichs, B., and Toscano, D., "The Effect of Using the Same Tire Friction for Both Vehicles in Impact Speed Reconstructions," SAE Technical Paper 2021-01-0899, 2021, https://doi.org/10.4271/2021-01-0899.