Evaluation of Experimental Restraints in Rollover Conditions

952712

11/1/1995

Authors
Abstract
Content
A controlled experimental program was conducted to determine the response of humans and a human surrogate with experimental lap belt restraints in -Gz acceleration environments. In the program, lap belt anchorage position (belt angle) and belt tension/slack were varied. Human volunteers were subjected to a static -1.0 Gz acceleration for each restraint configuration. A 95th percentile male Hybrid Ill dummy was subjected to a nominal 4.25 m/s (9.5 mph), -5 Gz impact while restrained by each restraint configuration. For the -Gz acceleration, significant changes in occupant head excursion were observed with varied lap belt configurations. In general, less pre-crash belt slack and higher lap belt angles produced significant reductions in occupant vertical excursions. This research provides data for use in evaluating or developing occupant survivability systems for rollover crash environments.
Meta TagsDetails
DOI
https://doi.org/10.4271/952712
Citation
Arndt, M., Mowry, G., Dickerson, C., and Arndt, S., "Evaluation of Experimental Restraints in Rollover Conditions," 39th Stapp Car Crash Conference (1995), San Diego, California, United States, November 8, 1995, https://doi.org/10.4271/952712.
Additional Details
Publisher
Published
11/1/1995
Product Code
952712
Content Type
Technical Paper
Language
English