DEVELOPMENT OF A SEAT PAD SUITABLE FOR MEASURING
Transcription
DEVELOPMENT OF A SEAT PAD SUITABLE FOR MEASURING
DEVELOPMENT OF A SEAT PAD SUITABLE FOR MEASURING MOTORCYCLE SEAT VIBRATION Neil J Mansfield and James P Irvine Department of Human Sciences Loughborough University Loughborough Leicestershire LE11 3TU UK Abstract Standard methods of measuring seat vibration have been developed with automotive applications in mind. The pad specified in standards for measurement of vibration on seats is a proven and accepted technology for conventional and suspension seats found in, for example, cars, trucks and off-road machinery. However, the pad is not suitable for measurements on motorcycles. The posture on motorcycle seats introduces some degree of uncertainty as to where to locate the pad and riders complain that the pad is uncomfortable. This paper describes the development and validation of a revised pad designed for motorcycles. 1. Introduction Traditionally, rider comfort on motorcycles has been seen as unimportant, as most riders saw the vibration as part of the biking experience. However, the increase in professional riders (e.g. police, paramedics, breakdown recovery, traffic congestion reporters, delivery and couriers) and therefore exposure time has been accompanied by a demand to improve comfort. For example, Bike Magazine (July 1998) included a comfort self-help guide: "…try and avoid just sitting like a sack of spuds - you can end up putting too much weight through the base of your spine and your backside will hurt more than King Edward II’s by the time you’ve done a hundred miles. Spread the weight, taking some through your legs and feet, some through your arms and the rest through your butt. Try and keep your back fairly straight in normal riding (you’ll automatically bend over as you go faster or crouch out of the wind, but do it all the time and you’ll get backache). The same goes for bending your back the other way - a surprising number of people ride like this and it can lead to lower back problems. It’s usually a symptom of an inability to relax, backed up by straight arms and hunched shoulders, and you often see it in less experienced riders." In a similar article in Motorcycle News (30 May 2001): "…we regard a bit of suffering as part and parcel of biking - a badge of hardness that sets us apart from flabby, cosseted car drivers…few of us realise that in certain circumstances, simply sitting on our bikes could also be harmful to our health." It is clearly not satisfactory to leave issues of health in the realms of self-help articles in magazines and newspapers. However, standard techniques for assessing other vehicles are not necessarily applicable to motorcycles. th Presented at the 36 United Kingdom Group Meeting on Human Responses to Vibration, held at Centre for Human Sciences, QinetiQ, Farnborough, UK, 12 - 14 September 2001 Previous research on vehicle vibration has focussed on cars and off road machinery. This has been due to these sectors either having a large market share or that they are perceived to be problematic regarding vibration exposure. It is therefore natural that techniques are optimised for these vehicles. The measurement of vibration at a seat requires that the transducers (e.g. accelerometers) are located between the body and the seat. The accelerometers must move with the interface, they must not alter the dynamic properties of either the seat or the body and they must offer little impedance to movement over the frequency range of interest. The two most common faults appear to be the use of devices which cause abnormal compression of the seat (or even require the cutting away of material from the seat cushion) and failure to recognise that the seat must be loaded with the impedance of the body. There are currently two generally recognised seat pad designs, one originally defined by the Society of Automotive Engineers (SAE, 1973), and another known as the SIT-BAR (seat interface for transducers indicating body acceleration received, Whitham and Griffin, 1977). There currently exists no specialised design of seat pad for use with a motorcycle although the SAE pad is generally used on conventionally shaped seats in most vehicles (cars, lorries, agricultural equipment, etc.) and has also been used to test vibration on the seats of motorcycles. Previous studies of vibration exposure on motorcycles are rare, although hand-arm vibration has been considered by Tominaga (2000) as has vibration at the feet (Doria and Cossalter, 2000). Measures of vibration on motorcycle seats have been reported (Seaman, 2001) where an SAE pad was used, but is was identified as 'very uncomfortable', did not fit to the profile of many motorcycle seats and riders found it difficult to sit normally on the seat with the seat pad in place. Likewise, in reference to ISO2631, Rafl and Korbel stated (1989): "To apply to motorcycles, it would be necessary to develop a new measurement methodology." This paper reports the design process of the development of a pad suitable for mounting accelerometers on the surface of motorcycle seats and initial validation. 2. Specification of a specification The seat pad is purely the means by which the accelerometers are protected from damage by the seat occupant and the means by which the seat occupant is protected from discomfort from the accelerometers. The pad must also be flexible to enable it to fit many different seat designs. The pad must be comfortable for the user in an effort to minimise the distraction from the task of controlling the motorcycle, as this could affect the way the machine is used or be dangerous due to distraction. Current seat pads are designed with a conventional seat in mind (car seat/chair) and thus the flexibility of these seat-pads is minimal. Indeed, a requirement of the SIT-BAR is that it is a rigid structure such that rotational movement can be detected. Such properties would be unacceptable for a motorcycle seat pad as the pad has to fit a much more diverse range of seat designs that occur on motorcycles and not on cars. Current seat-pad designs do not need to be secured in position as the subject is physically pressing it in position by sitting on it. The pad position is also stable due to the concave shape of the seat. Motorcycles generally have convex seats so a pad will need to be secured to the seat, either by 2 friction or a dedicated securing device. The pad will also be exposed to different environmental conditions to those that occur inside a car. The conditions that the motorcycle seat pad could have to endure include sunlight, oil, petrol, water, grease, grit/dirt, low and high temperatures. The requirements of a seat pad for motorcycles are listed in Table 1. Table 1. Requirements for a motorcycle seat pad 1. Must fit all motorcycles 2. Must be flexible to mould to all seat shapes 3. Must not alter vibration on the seat surface 4. Must be durable 5. Must protect accelerometers from the physical environment 6. Must be comfortable for the rider 7. Must accommodate triaxial accelerometer set 8. Must be low cost The current SAE-pad meets requirements 2, 3, 4, 5, 7 and 8 listed in Table 1. However, a redesigned shape for the pad might affect the vibration on the seat surface. Therefore, this study has focused on points 1 (fit to all motorcycles), 3 (reliability of the vibration measurement) and 6 (comfort for the rider). 3. Survey of motorcycle seat dimensions 3.1 Method The dimensions of 58 motorcycle seats were measured. A standardised proforma was used to log the motorcycle type, seat type, subjective seat hardness, and seat dimensions. Seat type was classified into 'single', 'dual' and 'split'. Subjective seat hardness was classified into 'v. hard', 'hard', 'firm', 'soft' and 'v. soft' and was assessed by the experimenter by sitting on the motorcycle. Seat hardness was therefore a general impression of the seat rather than an objective measure. The dimensions of the seat were measured using a tape measure and for the plan of the seat included: front width, narrowest width, rear width, greatest length and front width to narrowest width. For the profile of the seat the front relative depth, greatest relative depth and extent of curvature depth were measured. Measured seat dimensions are illustrated in Figure 1. 58 motorcycle seats were measured and included commuters, touring bikes and sports bikes. 3.2 Results and discussion The dimensions for the 58 motorcycle seats are listed in Table 2. Seat depths ranged from 290 to 510 mm; front seat widths ranged from 70 to 320 mm and rear seat widths ranged from 180 to 430 mm. The narrowest seats (CCM 604e and Gilera GSM50) were for specialist off road motorcycles where the motorcycle is designed to be ridden whilst standing on the foot pegs. Widest seats (BMW K1200, Kawasaki VN1500 and ZX6R) were found on touring bikes where long term comfort is a consideration. 3 A: Front width B: Narrowest width A C: Rear width D: Greatest length E E: Front width to narrowest width B F: Front relative depth G: Greatest relative depth H: Extent of curvature F G C H D Figure 1. Seat dimensions measured in motorcycle seat survey. th The narrowest width of the seats was less than the 5 percentile male distance between ischia centres (99.4mm, Peebles and Norris, 1998) which could result in discomfort if riders sat on the seat for extended periods of time. However, 84% of the seats were wide enough at their narrowest point to accommodate both ischia of a 95th percentile male (136.5mm). The relative dimensions give an idea of the overall geometry of the bike, whether it is an extreme curvature from front to back or a slight curvature on the cross section of the seat. The data can be interpreted by using a difference of the rear width of the seat to the narrowest width, the greater this difference, the more triangular the shape is. This sort of characteristic is typical of scooters and 'easy rider’ style bikes (such as Harley-Davidson). Conversely the opposite end of the scale exhibits characteristics that link to bikes with a more rectangular shaped seat. Bikes such as off-roaders which have generally narrow seats to complement the narrow nature of the bike, but also including bikes which could be considered as ‘all-rounders’ (these are bikes that are sports based but have added comfort for long distance riding). It is also worthwhile to notice that manufacturers tend to have similar seat geometries on bikes that are in the same product range. This is especially evident in Kawasaki’s ZX range of bikes. 4. Design of the motorcycle seat pad 4.1 Motorcycle pad shape The ideal seat pad must be ergonomically designed for the rider, but must also be suitable for the motorcycle. The survey of motorcycle seat dimensions indicated a broad range of seat shapes and sizes. One strategy for design would be to make a pad that fits onto the smallest top surface of the motorcycle seats surveyed. However, this would require a narrow pad with a width of less than 70 mm and a length of less than 300 mm resulting in a device that may not be stable on the surface of the seat that could also increase localised pressure on narrow seats, where localised pressure may already be an issue. 4 Narrow Width Rear Width Max. Length Soft Hard Firm Soft Firm Hard Hard Hard Firm Hard Soft Firm Firm Firm Firm Hard Firm Firm Firm Soft Hard Firm Hard Soft Firm Firm Firm Soft Firm V Hard Hard Soft Hard Firm Firm Hard Firm Hard Firm Firm Firm Hard Hard Soft Firm Soft Firm Firm Firm Firm Firm Firm Hard Hard Firm Hard Firm Hard x 200 130 190 250 190 190 70 260 220 240 200 100 220 230 190 300 300 250 200 270 180 270 150 160 180 230 200 240 140 120 260 220 320 280 220 150 230 260 160 120 250 320 130 240 240 170 240 190 120 150 240 160 250 240 130 190 120 x 200 130 190 250 190 190 70 210 210 230 190 100 220 220 190 260 280 250 200 260 180 270 150 160 180 230 200 240 140 120 230 220 270 240 220 150 230 260 160 120 240 320 130 240 240 170 220 190 120 150 240 160 220 230 130 190 120 370 310 320 430 330 320 320 190 210 320 280 350 180 290 300 320 330 300 330 290 260 350 300 290 290 280 320 250 430 410 340 370 310 400 430 370 330 340 370 380 280 340 320 280 360 350 270 300 290 320 310 290 230 370 300 300 290 250 x 300 420 510 490 480 480 400 420 320 410 430 510 360 440 370 410 490 460 360 420 320 400 400 340 380 410 460 460 420 360 450 360 460 410 300 300 300 360 490 350 390 480 360 350 290 360 380 350 450 490 360 300 360 420 430 460 510 5 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 210 90 10 10 0 0 90 0 150 210 0 0 50 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 150 0 260 120 0 0 0 0 0 0 100 0 0 0 0 0 110 0 0 0 0 0 80 80 0 0 0 0 10 -5 50 -20 80 80 40 10 60 70 60 -30 10 50 10 50 60 40 40 80 20 30 60 40 -10 40 -90 10 -10 40 70 80 110 30 50 40 20 70 20 -10 60 30 80 0 10 40 10 90 30 10 70 20 30 20 40 -60 -60 0 10 5 150 40 80 80 30 30 60 90 80 30 60 55 90 60 60 50 40 80 20 60 70 45 70 100 20 80 10 50 80 85 115 30 50 40 20 70 20 -10 70 30 90 15 10 50 10 95 32 20 80 20 30 20 50 100 30 Curvature Front Width Dual Single Split Split Dual Dual Dual Dual Dual Split Dual Dual Dual Dual Dual Dual Dual Dual Dual Split Single Single Dual Dual Dual Dual Dual Dual Split Single Dual Dual Dual Single Split Split Split Split Single Dual Dual Dual Dual Dual Single Single Split Split Split Dual Dual Dual Split Split Split Dual Dual Dual Front Narrow Width Front Rel. Depth Max Rel. Depth Hardness Aprilia GP Sonic Aprilia RSV Mille Aprilia SR Sport BMW K1200LT Cagiva Navigator 1000 Cagiva Raptor Cagiva V Raptor CCM 604e CCM 604RS Ducati 748 BP Ducati Monster 750 Gilera DNA Gilera GSM50 Super Motard Honda CB500R Honda CB600F Honda CB750 Honda CBR1100XX Honda CBR600F Honda Deauville Honda Fireblade Honda VTR1000 Honda VTR1000SP1 Honda X11 Kawasaki Eliminator Kawasaki ER5 Kawasaki GPZ500 Kawasaki GTR1000 Kawasaki KLR650 Kawasaki VN1500 Kawasaki VN800 Kawasaki W650 Kawasaki ZR7S Kawasaki ZRX1200 Kawasaki ZX12R Kawasaki ZX6R Kawasaki ZX7R Kawasaki ZXR400 Laverda 750s Moto Guzzi V11 Sport Peugeot Speedfight 2 Piaggio PX125 Suzuki Bandit 600 Suzuki Estilect Suzuki GN125 Suzuki GSXR1300R Suzuki GSXR600 Suzuki Marauder Suzuki SV650 Triumph T955i Yamaha 100 Neos Yamaha AeroX Yamaha Fazer Yamaha FZR400 Yamaha R1 Yamaha R6 Yamaha SR125 Yamaha TDM 850 Yamaha TW Trailway Seat Type Model Make Table 2. Dimensions of 58 motorcycle seats. 180 80 140 250 260 190 190 180 130 80 200 210 170 180 220 190 110 250 220 130 180 110 290 190 190 190 230 140 70 30 90 200 190 210 120 120 110 130 190 210 130 220 250 200 120 140 210 150 130 190 220 210 80 110 180 230 240 170 Uniform (does not alter seat profile) Sloped (increases seat angle) Domed (could cause discomfort for anterior leaning postures) Figure 2. Diagrammatic representation of effect of profiling the seat pad. An alternative strategy is to design the pad to be flexible such that it wraps around the seat edge. This has the advantage that it would not increase pressure at the edges of the pad and that it would be suitable for the diverse range of seat designs. 4.2 Motorcycle pad profile Taking into consideration the nature of motorcycle seats from the point of view of their general shape, a different concept is required to that of the existing SAE seat pad. This difference is because of the overall profile of a bike seat compared to that of a car. If the pad was to slope from front to back on a seat that naturally tends to slope forward, the pad would make this angle of slope even more extreme, altering the seat geometry such that it may affect the rider, in that they may be aware of the pad or perhaps even distracted by it (Figure 2). Similarly, a design which incorporates a dome, as for the SAE pad, could cause discomfort for male riders sitting astride the saddle leaning forwards due to increased pressure on the sex organs. The benefits of a more uniform cross-section than for the SAE pad offset the disadvantages of the increased seat depth. The depth of the profile is mainly determined by the size and number of accelerometers that need to be accommodated. The design requirement 7 (Table 1) stipulates that a tri-axial accelerometer set must be contained within the pad. Therefore, the pad must contain a cavity deep enough for orthogonally orientated accelerometers. 4.3 Design conclusions From the discussion above, one can identify a number of major considerations that need to be made for the design of a seat pad to measure vibration on a motorcycle. These are as follows: • The seat pad must exhibit a uniform cross section in the x-axis. • The seat pad must be able to accommodate accelerometers in an orthogonal set up. • The seat pad must be made of a material that will remain in the correct orientation during use. • The seat pad must be able to mould to the contour of the seat to provide minimal distraction to the rider. • The seat pad must be suitable for use on all of the motorcycles that have been measured. 6 For the pad to exhibit a uniform cross section in the x-axis it is crucial to ensure that the depth at the front of the pad is the same as the depth at the back of the pad. For the pad to accommodate the available Entran accelerometers it must have a 12mm cavity in the centre where the accelerometers will be positioned. As for the SAE pad, these should be mounted on a rigid disc to ensure good coupling with the seat. A disc width of 75mm would enable good coupling for all seats surveyed at the position where the accelerometers are mounted. 4.4 Design solution The design for the seat pad is shown in Figure 3. The fit of the pad was tested on a variety of motorcycle seats and it fitted all tested (e.g. Figure 4). 5. Validation of the motorcycle seat pad 5.1 Method To provide some indication of the validity of vibration measurements made with the motorcycle seat pad, tests were carried out using the new motorcycle pad and two different SAE pads (new flexible rubber, old semi-rigid resin). The same three orthogonally mounted accelerometers were used with each pad. Entran EGAS accelerometers were used with the pads. Signals from the accelerometers were amplified using battery powered custom built strain gauge amplifiers containing anti-aliasing filters set at 1000 Hz. Filtered signals were acquired at 4096 samples per second to a portable computer running National Instruments LabVIEW 5.1 via a ComputerBoards PCM-DAS16S/12 DAQ card. The equipment was mounted into a tank bag that was located in front of the riders. Two motorcycles were used for the tests and were ridden by their respective owners. The test bikes were a 500cc Honda CB500R 180° parallel twin and a 600cc Yamaha XJ600 in-line four. Each bike was ridden over the same section of country road in the same direction for each seat pad. Each measurement lasted 50 seconds, although the analysis was only carried out on the last 30 seconds of data, to ensure that the motorcycle was travelling at a constant speed. Five riders were also asked to judge the comfort of each pad on a 5-point scale (painful, uncomfortable, neutral, comfortable, very comfortable) whist the motorcycle was stationary. The safety and ethics committee of Loughborough University approved the experiment. 5.2 Results and discussion Power spectra of the vibration measured on the seats of the motorcycles using the three seat pads are shown in Figure 5. The power spectra demonstrate that the pads all perform in a similar manner as the general shapes of the spectra are similar. However, some differences are clear, particularly for the vertical measures at non-dominant frequencies. These could be attributed to a number of factors such as an internal resonance of the seat pad material, a localised resonance of the accelerometers 7 Figure 3. Design of new motorcycle seat pad. 8 Figure 4. Pad fitted to six different motorcycles including off road, scooter, easy rider, 2 x sports and touring bikes. mounting, or an electromagnetic shielding problem that the material of the pad provides which may affect noise. Weighted vibration magnitudes for the six measurements are shown in Table 3 and Figure 6. Measures of vibration using the three different mountings showed similar results. However, there were some small discrepancies between the three sets of data, primarily in the x-direction. For vibration in the xdirection the motorcycle pad consistently measured slightly higher vibration magnitudes than measures using the SAE pads. XJ600 CBR500R Table 3. Weighted vibration magnitudes measured using the three pads on the two motorcycles. Frequency Motorcycle Transducer Direction r.m.s. Total r.m.s. VDV Total VDV Weighting x Wd 0.787 2.824 Motorcycle 1.614 3.960 y Wd 0.522 1.925 pad z Wb 1.308 3.603 x Wd 0.685 2.520 Resin SAE 1.469 3.915 y Wd 0.544 2.067 z Wb 1.180 3.644 x Wd 0.586 2.042 Flexible 1.454 3.943 y Wd 0.557 2.146 SAE z Wb 1.208 3.776 x Wd 0.979 3.355 Motorcycle 1.607 4.061 y Wd 0.545 2.125 pad z Wb 1.151 3.342 x Wd 0.557 1.906 1.266 3.964 Resin SAE Wd 0.557 2.178 y Wb 0.990 3.812 z 2.694 x Wd 0.734 Flexible 1.439 4.002 y Wd 0.530 2.031 SAE 1.119 3.697 z Wb For the static comfort of the pads, all riders reported that the new motorcycle pad was either ‘neutral’ or ‘comfortable’, whilst the SAE pads were described in all cases as ‘painful’ or ‘uncomfortable’. 9 1 .000 0 .100 0 .010 0 10 20 30 Frequency (Hz) 0 .010 50 0 1 .000 40 10 20 30 Frequency (Hz) CB SAE y CB resin y CB moto y Power spectral density Power spectral density 1 .000 0 .100 0 .001 0 .001 0 .100 0 .010 0 .001 40 50 XJ SAE y XJ resin y XJ moto y 0 .100 0 .010 0 .001 0 10 20 30 Frequency (Hz) 40 50 0 1 .000 10 CB SAE z CB resin z CB moto z Power spectral density 1 .000 Power spectral density XJ SAE x XJ resin x XJ moto x CB SAE x CB resin x CB moto x Power spectral density Power spectral density 1 .000 0 .100 0 .010 0 .001 20 30 Frequency (Hz) 40 50 XJ SAE z XJ resin z XJ moto z 0 .100 0 .010 0 .001 0 10 20 30 Frequency (Hz) 40 50 0 10 20 30 Frequency (Hz) 40 50 Figure 5. Power spectra of motorcycle vibration measures on two motorcycles using three different pad types. Considering the measurements of vibration on the surface of the seats of the motorcycles, there are problems in interpreting vibration magnitudes or spectra. As there is currently no ‘gold standard’ method of measuring vibration on the seat of a motorcycle there is no reference measure of vibration that can be taken as reliable. The SAE pad is the most common pad used for measuring on seats and so this might be considered as a ‘target’ measurement. However, the discomfort from the pad might cause the riders to ride in a different way or in a different posture that could affect the results more than the differences between the pads. For these tests, then, any one of the three pads could be taken as the ‘correct’ measurement. It might therefore be appropriate to select the ‘best’ pad using other criteria than whether it reproduces the vibration measured using the SAE pad. A further problem with comparison of measures taken with the different pads is that the exact route that a motorcycle traverses is impossible to repeat. Therefore, the detail of the road profile at the wheels would be different each time producing different results at the seat surface. Such differences are always present for vehicle measurements and would also be expected for the ‘gold standard’ measuring pad. One way to eliminate this problem would be to conduct testing in the laboratory rather than on the road, thereby controlling the input to the seat / motorcycle combination. 10 CBR500R 5 y z to tal 4 Vibration magnitude 3 2 1 3 2 1 Flexible SAE (VDV) Resin SAE (VDV) Motorcycle pad (VDV) Flexible SAE (r.m.s.) (r.m.s.) Motorcycle pad (r.m.s.) Flexible SAE (VDV) Resin SAE (VDV) Motorcycle pad (VDV) Flexible SAE (r.m.s.) (r.m.s.) Resin SAE 0 Motorcycle pad (r.m.s.) 0 4 Resin SAE Vibration magnitude x XJ600 5 Figure 6. Weighted vibration magnitudes measured using the three pads on the two motorcycles. A final issue with interpretation of measurements on motorcycle seats is in the application of frequency weightings and treatment of multi-axis signals. Frequency weightings were developed using subjects sitting in an upright posture on a standard seat type. However, on a motorcycle, riders frequently lean forwards up to 45°. Therefore, vertical vibration at the seat will not be axial to the spine. This would be expected to influence the comfort and health considerations for multi-axis vibration. It is currently unclear whether signals should be (true) vector summed in the time domain such that co-ordinate systems can be aligned with the spine or whether it is acceptable to use seat based co-ordinate systems. 6. Summary Considering the design requirements in Table 1, one can conclude that an appropriate design has been achieved. • The pad fits all motorcycles currently available • The pad is flexible • The pad vibration measurements on the seat surface are valid • The material of the pad is durable and protective • The seat pad is comfortable • The seat pad accommodates a triaxial accelerometer set • The seat pad is low cost It is recommended that future tests of vibration on motorcycle seats uses this alternative to the SAE pad. The seat pad might also be suitable for use with other saddled vehicles such as push-bikes, some boats, quad bikes, horses and snow-scooters. 11 7. References Anon (1998) Rider comfort and posture. Bike Magazine, July 1998. Anon (2001) Bend over - this won't hurt a bit. Well, maybe a little… Motor Cycle News, May 30 2001, 28-31. Society of Automotive Engineers (1973) Measurement of whole-body vibration of the seated operator of agricultural equipment - SAE J1013. Society of Automotive Engineers, SAE recommended practice J1013. Whitham EM and Griffin MJ (1977) Measuring vibration on soft seats. Society of Automotive Engineers, SAE paper 770253 Tominaga Y (2000) A report for Japanese mailmen who used motorbikes daily. Proceedings of 8th International Conference on Hand-Arm Vibration, 9-12 June 1998, Umeå, Sweden. Eds., Ronnie Lundström and Asta Lindmark. Doria A and Cossalter V (2000) Riders sensitivity to motorcycle vibrations. Paper presented at the 2nd International Conference on Whole-Body Vibration injuries, 7-9 November 2000, Siena, Italy. Seaman RA (2001) The development of a motorcycle vibration measurement procedure. Final year MEng Systems Engineering project report, Department of Human Sciences, Loughborough University. Rafl J and Korbel Z (1989) Measurement and evaluation of motorcycle vibration acting on the driver as part of improved safety in operation. Proceedings of the 5th international pacific conference on automotive engineering, Nov 5-10, 1989. Peebles L and Norris B (1998) Adultdata. The handbook of adult anthropometric and strength measurements - Data for design safety. Department of trade and industry, DTI publication 2917/3k/6/98/NP URN 98/736. 12