The Vision of a Comprehensive Safety Concept

2001-06-0252

06/04/2001

Event
International Technical Conference on Enhanced Safety of Vehicles
Authors Abstract
Content
A look at the various past achievements in the field of passenger car safety raises the question whether any dramatic steps towards its improvement can still be expected. Will progress be confined to the optimization of existing systems or does the future hold new substantial safety steps? This paper elaborates on the issue that the time available before a potential accident occurs can be used to improve the safety of occupants and other involved road users. Accident analysis confirms that this is feasible for about two-thirds of all accidents. The recognition of an imminent collision bears a noteworthy potential for accident prevention, reduction of accident severity and injury severity. The former boundary between active and passive safety thus fades continually.
Based upon this it is possible to describe vehicle safety by a comprehensive approach encompassing seven escalation levels. This approach underscores the future intention of Mercedes-Benz to increasingly embrace preventive protection systems in the form of "collision mitigation'' on the active safety side, and "PreSafe™'' on the passive safety side. This contribution, focusing on PreSafe™, presents various protective measures and describes their advantages.
Meta TagsDetails
Pages
9
Citation
Baumann, K., Schöneburg, R., and Justen, R., "The Vision of a Comprehensive Safety Concept," SAE Technical Paper 2001-06-0252, 2001, .
Additional Details
Publisher
Published
Jun 4, 2001
Product Code
2001-06-0252
Content Type
Technical Paper
Language
English