side impact - Insurance Institute for Highway Safety
Transcription
side impact - Insurance Institute for Highway Safety
W en a car gets struck very ha d 'n he si e, ike thi one did, the result can be just as deadly as it looks, early 10 000 people died in side impacts on U. . roads last year, and the prolr lem isn t just here. bout 6500 people die annually in side impacts in Europe so ffjcials 00 both ides of the tlantic are addressing this problem. The U.. side impact protection standard and the one scheduled to take effect in urope p cify a test with a moving barrier intended to simulate a car-to-car crash. Both specify era h forces that aren't to be exceeded, as measured on instrumented dummies. Then the differenc begin. The m ving barrier are diUerent. The dummi are dj(ferent. The criteria used to m aure the risk of injury are different The up hot is that U.. and European safety tandards could lead to different designs for side impact protection in orne cars. This doesn't make sense. Human bodies are the same, so car designs intended to protect them in the arne type of impact ought to be the same too. This special Status Report focuses on side impact protection especially the differences between . and European approaches to protecting people. U. S. and European Approaches to Protecting People in Side Impacts Reflect More Differences than Agreement Both U.S. and European dynamic side Impact requirements erg tell us they have different door designs - or they will have soon - for cars thai are intended to reduce are essentially the same otherwise, de· injury risk when cars pending on whether they must meet side impact test requirements in the United States or Europe. But only one of these designs can be optimal lor human beings. DUfereoces In Test Procedures: Both the U.s. and European tests mimic a car· to-car side impact. The struck car is stationary. The striking one is represented by a deformable barrier that moves. But then the differences begin, and there are many. The European barrier moves perpe.!l-" dicular to the struck car at 31 mph. The U.s. barrier travels at 33.5 mph, but all four of its wheels are turned sideways 50 that it moves at an angle to the stJUd: car. This is intended to simulate an intersection crash in which the struck car is going 15 mph and the striking car goes 30 mph. Barrier Differences: In tbe United States. the distance bet-.-een the ground and the barrier's to.-er edge ~ II inches are struck In the side by other vehicles, typically at intersections. The U. S. standard was phased In beginning in 1994 and applies 10 all 1997 cars. AEuropean Union directive will apply 10 new designs introduced after OCtober 1998 and to all new passenger vehicles by 2003. But these two standards Men't the same. Test requirements differ, and some autcr makers say they may have to implement different countermeasures to protect people in the same type of crash (see "Same Car. Same Side Impact Protection.· p.6). For example, Institute President Brian 01~eill explains. "some carmak· M (279 mm) compared with 12 inches (300 mm) in Europe. Alower barrier tends to strike relatively stiff structures such as the door sill, whereas a higher one strikes the softer central section of the door. This means that, in general, the less the ground clearance, the less stringent the test. On the other hand, the U.S. barrier Is heavier than Europe's and, all other things being equal, heavier barriers make for tougher tests. Another difference is that the U.S. side impact barrier has a stiff, narrow piece across its front representing a bumper. The European barrier has a smooth face. Wider and Uniformly stiffer than the European barrier, the U.s. one -doesn't represent a European car very well: Adrian Hobbs of Eng. land's Transport Research Laboratory points out ·Contrary to what most people would expect, this stiffness makes it rather more benign than the European barrier: Hobbs contends the U.s. barrier is so stiff it can be fended off by reinforcing a car's Aand Bpillars. Merely strengthening these wouldn't improve crashworthiness, according to Hobbs, who notes that real cars aren't uniformly stiff the way the U.S. barrier is. The European barrier, Hobbs says, is more demanding even though it's less stiff. It crushes where it strikes the door pillars while the rest of it continues through the gap between the pillars. How the side of a car is pushed in is important, Hobbs continues. Loading should be spread over an occupant's whole body, not concentrated. He claims the U.s. barrier seems to "help control (delonnationl in a desirable way, whereas cars don't, regrettably .... 1would be quite worried about the {U.s.) barrier. In fact, it's probably the thing I worry about more than any other aspect of the test. w Other researchers come to dillerent conclusions. Transport Canada has chosen the U.s. barrier, although researchers at this organization still are studying some aspects of side impact testing (see "Taking Cues from U.S. and Europe," p.IO). According to Dainius Dalmotas and others at Transport Canada who compared the two barriers, ~the U.S. version was found to produce vehicle deformation patterns and dummy responses which were more consistent with those observed in vehicle-t<>vehicle tests.~ Oynamlc and/or Static Tests: The U.s. side impact protection stan. dard includes static as well as dynamic test requirements, and the static ones came rust ears have to ·resist a piston pressing a rigid steel cylinder inward against the door: Reinforcing side doors with metal beams - the usual method of meeting this requirement- has proven effedive in single-vehicle crashes, according to federal officials. In contrast, the European directive doesn't include static requirements at all. ~1I stiff or massive items in the door impact against the oc· cupant, they could cause more serious injury than the door itself,M Hobbs says. ~II, like some door beams, they concentrate loads upon a small area of the body, this is potentially more dangerous than if the loads are spread more evenly: Differences Among Test Dummies: The rationale for the side im· pact rules in both the United Stales and Europe is to reduce the risk of thoracic and peMc injuries including rib fractures and ((OOt'd on pA) U.s. lIldelllli*lllllldanl_ ~ lest IpedlItd In ooIlber the . .cI 1D iIlJ"'" Ilructurel BoIh ..... lll__lawllllllll_. fiiIoIde - !IIporIIDI1Jecause Iii't I ..... Ill""" tIte PIn.·It.odt. mdudeI a perforllddn!u lIIJarIeIlrom Ibe lIiIlIItor 1IlIIfII:eI, but I1IdI con- . . . occur cIurtnc the campiI- 'lll\lle QllIed SIll.., _injuries ......... _by.sepa~'" be IIn. The pIOI> '...us. "'...' lll''pNt«tlaa ~1IMp. c:ouId _ ""_ prol> . ::::=:::.=. .m: BIIW __ ""_10 1Je by ... 1Or1lJe aad. -..d, tubular head "'1Il1tbd .....,...... tIte window (see $aIirui """'" \Ill3l, No.4, May 4, 1996). The _ .....ahOUId pml!II1lu11 or partJaI ejection. IIIIW told the Natloaal HIghw.y Traffic ,IIW!!lIl._1haI this cIeIliJ1. sIaIed lor J99711M1de1J, may not be deployable ............... 1haI cauId be .......... to U.s. bead protecUoD rule. ADd al...... lbe IIIW.,...,. oller are- head ,......."'..., mIflhl DOl_ail ...... , t 1pOCI1Bl '" tIIe.- coverlDg _1iIIpodJ wttb upper_lnIerlors. SuppolliJIB BMW'. request lor .lterDaU.e .................. tIte-Uflled thelederal IlIIIICI'ID"pInl spedaf _ 1 0 'lllems lbal oIkr beooiItI outside !he scope of existing llaDdanIaaad to. . - some InItrim acetllIlIIlOdaIIm Ii crash dopIoyabIe SjSlemI desIf1ed to _ _ meet. _thIl __ litlte_..-_ Side aldlop d lip EI specollcally to prUect tile _ .. beIDll dewIoped by _ automat..lid ............. 4 Status Repo~ Vol. 31, No. ~ Sept. 2~ 1996 (cont'd from p.3) soft tissue injuries to the heart, lungs, and other organs. The Eu- ropean directive also includes abdominal injury criteria and evaluates head injury risk if head contact occurs (see ~Neither Standard Gives Head Protection the Attention It Deserves,~ p.3). Belted, instrumented dummies are used to assess injury potential in both U.S. and European tests, but there's disagreement about exactly what to measure to assess particular injury risks. Plus, the side im· pact dummies used in the two tests mimic human responses differently. A key question in developing these dummies has been whether acceleration of the spine and ribs or compression of the rib cage is the key parameter in measuring injury likelihood. or whether both are important. Acceleration is the rate of velocity change, and measuring it indicates the forces inflicted on the body during the crash. Compression refers to the extent the body is deformed by the impact. The first side impact dummy, SID, measures acceleration only. Later generations 01 dummies, EuraSlO and SioSIO, measure acceleration plus compression. And unlike SID, they also can measure the likelihood of neck and abdominal injury. Developed by the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA), SID is used in U.s. testing. EuraSlO, developed by the European Experimental Vehicles Committee, is used in Europe. BioSID is based on a General Motors design. The acceleration-based injury criterion used with SID is the thoracic trauma index (dummy) or ITI(d), According to NHTSA, TIl is a formula that can be used to predict the probability 01 injury. It's the average of the peak acceleration measured on the lower spine and the greater of the peak acceleration values of the upper and lower ribs of the lest dummy. Acompression-based injury criterion used with EuroSJO and BioSIO is the viscous criterion, or V*C, which accounts for both the extent and rate of chest compression. To calculate V*C, it's necessary to measure rib deflection. EuraSlD and BiaSlD are equipped to measure this, but SID isn't. V*C proponents argue ils superiority, compared with m(d) or other accelerationbased injury criteria, which EuroSIO and BioSIO also measure. For example, an auto manufacturers' trade association has told NHTSA thaI measuring acceleration of rigid dummy spine or ribs doesn't reliably predict injury to viscous chest organs. The potential for such injury can depend on the extent and rate of compression, both 01 which V*C takes into account. Although TIl indicates maximum force - the agent that causes compression - it doesn't consider how fast the force is applied or how much compression results. NHTSA defends TIl, noting it was deve~ oped with 10 years of cadaver testing in which rib and spine acceleration was compared with the severity of thoracic injury during impacts. uThe occurrence of injuries to the hard thorax, which includes both the ribs and the internal organs protected by the ribs, is strongly related to the average of the peak lateral acceleration experienced by the struck side rib cage and lower thoracic spine,' NHTSA says. The agency claims that ~as long as ... TII(d) ... can discriminate risk of thoracic injury, the precise injury mechanism (acceleration, compression, some combination of forces, etc.) is not critical .... Since accelerometers on the ribs and spine are located close to the viscous organs within the chest, they measure parameters that may cause viscous organ injuries." And while there are no abdominal injury criteria in the standard, NHTSA says the lower rib and spine accelerometers are close to where abdominal organs such as the liver, spleen, and kidneys would be. Critics aren't convinced. ~The absence of any performance criterion addressing abdominal injury clearly represents a major deficiency in the current requirements' of the U.S. standard, Transport Canada's Dalmotas concludes. The problem could be remedied, he points out, by replacing SID with either EuroSID or BioSJD. Which Dummy? "It doesn't make sense to eoaluate side impact protection using an outol-date and inadequate dummy, especially when better dummies are auailable. " Brian O'Neill, President, Insurance Inslirure for Highway Safety Which Barrier? "I would be quite worried about the [US] borrier. In fact, it's probobly the thing I worry about more than any other aspect, " Adrian Hobbs, Transpol1 Research Laboratory, Eng/and "The US, {barrier] was found to produce vehicle deformation patterns and dummy respanses which were more consistent with those obseroed in vehicleto-vehicle tesa. " Dalnius Dalmo/OS, T_C<moda Status Report, SID-lIs and the Quest for aDummy To Use Worldwide 'If We Could Get to One Test Device that Truly Is Oose to a Human Being, That Would Be a Huge Advantage Everywhere' What with ID. Eor ID, and Bi ID. rt might seem like the last thing th arid needs is another ide impact dumm . But it's exactly hat's needed, according to the Occupant afety Research Partner hip created by a research consortium of U.. automakers. The partnership says it s time to replace the three rival dummies (see "Differences Among Test Dummies n p.3) with a new one everyone agrees on. "Individuals around the world are aU basically he arne biomechanicall so having differen dummies in dillerent markets is not warranted from a biomechanical standpoint," the partnership told the 1996 conJerence on the Enhanced ale of Vehicles. The goal i one dummy pecified in worldwide regulation." Many international experts share this viewpoint. Yet agreement on a worldwide dummy may be a long way off. tars ( s) represent sensors. The red represent abdominal sensors. SID was the first side impact dummy, developed in the fate 1970$ by the National Highway TraHic Safety AdminisfTafion. Critics of this test dummy charge that the absence of sensors in lis abdominal region underscores its inktiority to the lIDo newer side impact dummieJ, Em& SID and BioSlD. SID-lIs i the dummy the partnership proposes to "become an international corr sensus choice .' . lirst in a f.amil of technologicall advanced ide impact dummies. econd generation (II) mall ( ) ide impact dumm Io-ns corr pond to a 5th percentile adult female. Besides serving as a prototyp for an international test device, this dummy is designed to help evaluate the effect on smaller occupants 01 various countermeasures including side airbags. The three side impact dummies now In u e - SID, EuroSlD, and Bio ID - correspond to 50Lh percentile males. The partnership hopes a midsize adul male SlD-IIs would follow alter orld'de evaluation and modification" of the th percentile female. 31, I. 0. Confiden e in ID-U as a n ensllS choic com partly becau e It i n't perilied in any regulation. But thi tatus makes it a p or choice lor international recognition, according to Jac Wi mans 01 TNO Road-VI hides Research Institute in the etherlands, which h Iped d velop Euro ro. He otes that both 10 and EuJOID appear i regulations. and Bi lD has been exten ively tudied. But ID-n as "de eJoped without European inpuL and deviates fr all three. "IL' much more difficult I th' ,to e such a dum y accepted than It would be to sit d wn iLh the Japanese, uropean and Americans and define whaL is ood and not good about Euro ID and lD .... It would be mu 'h easier to intr duce uch a modified du my In a regulation than to just start Iro scratch," ays Wismans. tarting from cratrn i what oger Daniel th partnership s pr j man er for ID-IJs pr poses if this dummy i n t acceptabl" ha a good t t d . ,bu we auld be willing to complet I tart over if that' hat the 'orld communi want ," he a . Daniel a knowledges om of th criticisms, an wering the complaint hal lOris was designed without worldwid input by explaining this was believed to b the quickest way to provide a pie e f hardware experts worldwide could valuate." Although lh JD.I1s prototype designed a cor ing to the EngU h tern of measurement , the first produ . n dummy, available in mid-l99 will be enti 1. metric. And rhile ome sa lD-1Is' imply a mailer ersion of Bio m, Dani I and his colleagu claim ~all design asp t were con idered from the thre mid ize male sid impact dummies now in lise. IIThere are a lot of individuals and perhaps corp rations and perhap ven governmenL entities that are not happ with SID or uro 10, Daniel point out. Th whole object i to act as a catal 1. w could et to one test device tha i close to a human being that would be a huge advantag everywhere." ft Same Car Could Be Designed Two Ways to Meet Two Different Side Impact Standards Car That Looks the Same Could Differ in Crash Protection Depending on Whether It's lor Sale in U.S. or Europe Both the U.S. and the European side impact protection standards are based on performance. That is, they allow auto manufacturers to modify their vehjcles any way they want a long a they meet applicable injury criteria. This means an automaker can modify a car differently to meet either the U.S. standard or the one in the European Union. Ford, General Motors, and Chrysler say design dillerences may become necessary. "Lack of harmonization" between the U.. and European standards is necessitating llmassive effort tbat is not productive: Guy Nusholtz of Chrysler points out. Modifications could include structural changes, added door padding, or a combination. ~Paddlng is only a complement to structural improvements and bas only lim- ited effect on its own," Adrian Hobbs says in reference to the European directive. Hobbs is affiliated with England's Transport Research Laboratory. According to the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA) llStruc;tural improvements alone did not necessarily result in significant reductions in thoracic acceleration." The agency says a better approach is "to provide 'equivalent padding' (either actual padding or modified, energy-absorbing sheet-metal structure) as necessary in the door area. This should be more cost-effective than making structural changes" to reduce injurjes to the thorax and pelvis. Even manufacturer who u e padding 10 meet both standards may not be able to use the same type of padding. "Generally, the thorax padding effective to meet the U.S. standard is too stiff for EuroSID and tends to increase its chest deflection, Toyota sMasatake Shiratori told Status Report. Such padding isn't used in the European versions of the Celica and Paseo. In. comments on the U.S. side impact rule, several automakers have questioned the overall effectiveness of the padding that achieves acceptable TII(d) values in compliance tests. Both General Motors and Ford claim ~the use of TIl(d), coupled with ... the excessive stiffness and excessive mass of the SID chest, could lead to the use of interior padding that is overly stiff and could actually degrade occupant safety, particularly that of the elderly. (The U. .side impact standard relies on the injury criterion mCd) while the European directive uses compression-based criteria including V*C. For an explanation of these and discussion of rD versus Euroill, see "Differences Among Test Dummies p.3.) Aconsideration i the effect o~ certain types of padding on elderly occupants. This is important because research indicates that improvements should focus on elderly people who are more likely to be involved in fatal side impacts and are more vulnerable to serious injury. "You have to be very careful. We don't design our vehicles blindly" to the U.S. standard, Robert Hultman of Ford explains. We ... make sure that we don't put overly stiff padding in just because the dummy says you're going to pass." Some automakers question whether the padding that reduces TTl in crash tests would have any benefit in actual collisions. BMW has told NHTSA that TTis were so sensitive to dampi.ng that they could be "reduced without achieving a corresponding increase in real-world safety." According to Nissan, the "padding hardness" that's required "to minimize TIlCd) values on the one hand and minimize V*C and rib deflection values on the other did not match." While not foreclosing the possibility that the U.S. tandard auld be improved, HT Ais confident it's effective. The agency's RoH Eppinger, who was instrumental in developing TIl, says NHTSA researchers have studied the performance in actual crashes of cars that meet U.S. side impact requirements. lIes a very small handful of cases. But at this point we have no evidence that cars designed to TIl, using SID and our crash conditions, produce a vehicle that's not safe." Led by Dainius Dalmotas of Transport Canada, Canadian researchers have analyzed the U.S. test and take a different view (see ~Taktng Cues from U.S. and Europe" p.lO). "All of the [Canadian] tests, even those which produced exceptionally low TTl values, exceeded biomechanical injury thresholds" for abdominal injuries. In other word t cars designed to produce good TIls may not be as safe as possible. The latest developments are side airbags in addition to frontal ones. These might make it easier for automakers to meet U.. and European requirements using one design. "We think we could ... although we're not sure. But you do have to make the airbag aggressive," Nusholtz of Chrysler points out. Ford's Hultman says he generally agrees with this. "We do believe that side airbags may enable us to achieve one design faT both Europe and the United States, and right now we're doing research and development on a combination head/chest bag toward this goal. However, it might be necessary to have slightly different rates of inflation and/or airbag internal pressure to satisfy both requirements [U.S. and Europe], which again would get you two dif· ferent designs. But they should be a little easier to control if you can do it wjth a side airbag." Volvo, the first manufacturer to offer side ail'bags, says it simultaneously meets both standards with interior door padding together with other measures, adding that the airbags "make the cars even safer.» However, the potential design conflicts produced by the two standards are thought to be more of a problem for somewhat smaller cars than Volvo sells In the United tates. 8 Slatus Report, Vol. 31,No. 8, Sept. 28, 1996 Should Side Impact Tests Be Added to NeAP's Fronta Ones? The lederal government not only sets compliance test requirements for Dew cars but also conducts crash tests to supply consumers with safety information and to prompt automakers to improve occupant protection. So far, these tests under the New Car Assessment Program (NCAP) include frontal impacts only. Now that all new cars have to meet dynamic side impact requirements, it might be the right time to expand NCAP to indude side tests, too. The National Highway Traffic Safety Administration thinks so. NCAP has been successful (see Status Reporl; VOl. 30, No.1, Jan. 14, 1995), so it may be assumed that side impact information would be useful, too. The side tests the agency is proposing would be run at a higher speed than compliance tests - a closing speed of about 38 mph versus 33.5 - just as frontal NCAP tests are conducted at 35 mph instead of 30. Congress repeatedJy has denied funding for side NCAP tests but plans to lund them in fiscal 1997. There's also a reqUirement to develop a plan for achieving harmonization with the European standard. Given funds, the agency's Richard Morgan has promised that side testing would begin next year. Most automakers oppose such testing, contending the side impact standard is relatively new. There could be problems with test variability, they say, if the NCAP side impact is run at a hjgher speed. An NCAP side test might also accentuate differences between U.S. and European rule (see MU.S. and European Approaches," p.2). MThere could indeed be continuing and maybe stronger conflicts between what we would do to meet a [side NCAP test] and a European performance level," General Motors' Paul Eichbrecht explains. 'jOne possibility is, you might have to throw some very stiff padding at a vehicle if it doesn't have an airbag." Mick Scherba, also of General Motors, adds that "we know by adding that pad- ding you may in fact reduce TTI but with the limitations of SID ... and the lack of biolidellty ... it may be driving us in a direction that doesn't reduce occupant harm. And if we had a more biofidelic dummy that gave us more human-like measures in "[cannot share the view that the different standards cause divergence in safety designs nor that higher speeds cause divergence. They may lead to some small differences in safety design, but they probably will be small. " James Hackney, National Highway Traffic Safety Administraiion the thorax where we Know that injury is important, and in the head like the EuroSID, we would hopefully be designing an improved product." (The U.S. side impact standard relies on the injury criterion, TTI(d), wmle the European directive uses compression-based criteria including V*C. For details and discussion of three side impact dUIIlmies, see "Differences Among Test Dummjes," p.3.) Side airbags also might become more aggressive. MAs you raise the speed of the side impact, Scherba explains, "you have even less time than in a frontal crash to sense the impact and inflate the bag. And you know what? You're going to put a higher output inflator in the side bag, and then guess what's going to happen to a cmld who's asleep against the door when that side airbag goes off? That's what you need to think about." Adding side impacts to NCAP "would really make it difficult," agrees Sherman Henson of Ford. "Any chance we would have of making a similar car for Europe and the United States would just be taken away. I don't believe we could any longer have the same side structure in a car." Chrysler's Guy Nusholtz says modeling, "obviously hypothetical," shows adding side tests to NCAP would exacerbate design differences. "It ended up with larger pads, more aggressive airbags," he says. But the agency's James Hackney says he "cannot share the view that the different standards cause divergence in safety designs nor that higher speeds cause divergence. They may lead to some small differences in safety design, but they probably will be small." When asked if it would be better to wait until possible harmonization of the U.S. and European standards, both Morgan and Why It's So Important: The driver of the Geo Metro (top left) died from skull and cervical fractures at the scene of the crash when her car lOOS struck in the side by a larger sedan. Two more people died when their Pontiac Grand Am (above left) was struck broudside by a pickup truck. The driver died of massive injuries to the head and chest, and a rear-seat passenger died of chest and abdomina! injuries. The dn'ver of the Mitsubishi Eclipse (top middle) suffered amnesia, and the Mercury Tracer's (above right) driver suffered a broken collarbone when his car was struck dUring a right tum. The driver of the Pontiac Grand Prix (top right), struck in the side by a utility Vf'hicle, was admitted to the hospital with a concussion, two fractures of the pelvis, a rib fracture, and pneumothorax. None of these vehicles wa~ certified to meet the dynamic side impact protection standard now in effect in the United S)ates, and it isn't known whether the standard would have reduced the injuries. II is known that U.s. and European safety standards don't address many sources of head injury in side impocts. Hackney note that while the U.s. standard has been in place for three years, the Eurcr peans have yet to begin side impact tests. Hackney expresses confidence in the U.s. compliance test and in the prospect of running it at a higher speed. "We started researching the side impact standard in the late 1970s, and the research that went on was very extensive .... There are always flaws and weaknesses, but we feel very confident regardless 01 the speed. We had a lot of variable speeds in our research program - we did speeds at or near or even above the proposed NCAP speed so we have quite a bit of confidence that reductions in the injury criteria of the dummy will lead to reductions in realworld injuries." The Institute supports the concept 01 a side impact assessment program. But In- stitute President Brian O'Neill explains that "we have serious reservations about the direction the agency is taking. Re· search by the Canadian government and others has highlighted the inadequacies 01 SID in reliably assessing abdominal injury likelihood. II doesn't make sense to evaluate side impact protection using an out-oldate and inadequate dummy, especially when better dummies are available." 10 alU5 Report, VoL 3J. '0. 8, Sept. 28, /996 gC esfro uo..a..aa', .1~1.l.,nere " and E ope, Officials P ue Own Side 1m act Standards The quest to find the b st side Impact protection standard isn't confined to the United tates and European Union. Officlals In other countries are considering their own responses to U,e side Impact problem. and they're basing their consideratIon on .. and European experience. Canada, for example, has permitted the sale of cars that meet .. safety standards. But the . side Impact standard - pedficaJI the use of SID - has been ri Iclzed ee IrnIs and th u for a Dummy to Use orldwide. p.5). (cording to Transport Canada' Dainiu almotas and others es in Canada "d on trated that vehicle models designed without the aid of advanced dummi uth as the BioSID frequently howed c plionally low TIl values when tested willi th U.. lD but excep 'onally high abdominal deflection, V*C, and force values wh n tested with either the EuroSID or BloSID under identical test conditions." (fhe U. .side Impact tandard relies on the injury criterion. TIled), while the European directive uses compression-based criteria including V*C. For an explanation of these and discussion of related issues, see Differences Among Test Dummies," p.3.) These researchers conclude that both e U. . and European tandards could be satisfied with interior padding but that using a dummy ·capable of supporting deneetion and force criteria." uch as BioSID r ElIT ID is d irable. They further note the need to "'monitor the response o[ the abdomen in any dummy that' used. "I think anyone who has looked hard at both ID and TTl has some very basic concerns about them" Eric eJboume oJ Transport Canada points out. "Our preference is Quite simply to use a measure that directly bears on the injury risk for internal organs, which is rib deflection, talking specifically about the chest. And you've also got essentially abdominal ribs in BioSID . , . which giv om informative measure of what going on there." \ eJbourne reports that Transport Canada, which already has extensive experience with all three side impact dummies, plans further tests this year with a fourth one, [[)'lls. Dynamic side impact test procedur also are under discussion in Australia where there's a proposal to permit cars to meet either the U.. or European standard. Tllis is based on Federal Office of Road Safety research to estimate the likely beneHts from using either regulation. The resulting benefit-cost ratios were about the same1.59 for the European rule and 1.47 for the U.. standard. ow Australian reguJators are planning research to examine the Ukely benefits of alia ing a thjrd alternative which combin the better features of the 0 regulation and promotes the use of the Hi ID dummy." In addition to Bio TO, the propo ed hybrid regulation would us the injury criteria associated ith Eur ID. Lo the extent possible, and it would use the barrier face specified in the European directive. The impact geometry and u e of front and rear seat dummies would be according to the U.S. rule. Australian researchers point out that finding benefits of the hybrid procedure equal to or greater than those for the current U.. and European regulation would support the hybrid test proposal being conidered in international forums as an alternative to those standards. Japane e analysjs points to adopting "regulation equivalent to the Earop n test method with a target date of 0 ~ her 199 . according to the Ministry of Transport and Japan utomobile Manufa ure ociation. Researchers at th e organization conclude that EUTO ID is more biofidelic than ID. They further point out that the frontal dimensions and stiffne s characteristics of Japanese vehicles are doser to those of the European barrier than to the barrier used for compliance with the U.S. side impact standard. Status Report, IbI. 31, No. ~ Sept 28, /996 11 When we think of protecting people in side impacts, we think first of protecting the ones riding closest to the point of impact - the near side - who are more likely to be injured. But don't forget about people on the far side. They're at considerable injury risk, too, Institute researchers confirm. The risk among far-side occupants is greatest for the elderly, lor motorists who aren't using their safety belts, and lor people riding in pickups or utility vehicles. Safety belts are particularly important. Unbelted occupants on the side opposite the impact point are more than lour times as likely as belted occupants to be seriously injured. Overall injury risk is greater in cars than it is in light trucks. Even after adjusting for the differences in occupant age, safety belt use, and vehicle weight, researchers have found that occupants seated near side impact points in cars were three times as likely to be seriously injured as near-side occupants in light trucks. The situation is reversed among far-side occupants. Those in cars were significantly less likely to be seriously injured than those in light trucks. Other researchers have reported similar findings. A1984 study from Calspan Field Services reported that, among drivers of cars struck by other cars on the passenger side, the rate 01 serious injury was IS percent. Among drivers 01 light trucks whose vehicles were struck by cars on the passenger side, however, the injury rate was 20 percent. What accounts for this dillerence? It seems as il the people in the light trucks would be less likely to be injured - not more likely - because their vehicles are heavier than the cars that hit them. And the ground clearance of light trucks is higher than that of cars, so the striking cars are more likely to hit the relatively stiff door sill, not the door panel. This would produce less intrusion into the oc· cupant compartment of the light truck, so it seems like injury risk would be reduced. Yet the risk is actually greater for far-side occupants in light trucks. To explain this, the Institute researchers hypothesize that the cars striking the stiff door sills of the light trucks could cause higher deceleration forces that contribute to the injury severity ollar-side occupants, More often among far·side occupants than among those riding on the near side, head and neck injuries are the most severe. The near·side occupants do sustain head and neck injuries, but they're usually not as severe as the chest injuries they also sustain. Understandably, efforts at side impact protection have focused on near-side occupants, who are at greatest injury risk. And because these occupants tend to be better olf in light trucks than in cars, the trucks generally are considered safer. But the Institute's new research shows that far-side occupants of light trucks are at considerable risk. Although the numbers in this study are relatively small, the growing popularity 01 light trucks should provide even more evidence of this phenomenon, the researchers say. Anew federal standard covering head impacts with upper vehicle interiors may help reduce the severity 01 both head and neck injuries in side impacts (see Status Report, Vol. 30, No. 10, Dec. 2, 1995). This standard, which covers light trucks as well as passenger cars, will be phased in over five years beginning with 1999 models. Also beginning with 1999s, new light trucks sold in the United States will have to meet the same dynamic side impact test requirement that applies to cars. Current designs of most light trucks are expected to easily meet this requirement. For a copy of "Side Impact Crashes: The Relationship of Vehicle and Crash Characteristics to Injury Severitt by C.M. Farmer et al., write: Publications, Insurance Insti· tute for Highway Safety, 1005 N. Glebe Rd.. Arlington, VA 22201. ATUS'~REPORT 1005 Nnrth GlelJe Road Arlington, VA 22201 (703) 247-15110 FAX (703) 247-1678 http://www.rrwysalety.org Director of PublicationsjEdilor: Aone Fleming Writers: Maria Kau(mann, KIm Stewart Editorial Assistant: Carlene Hughes Art Director: Joyce Thompson Graphic Designer. Leslie Oakey The Insurance Institute (or Highway Safety Is an independenl, nonprofit, scientific ~nd educational organization dedicated 10 reducing Ihe losses - dealhs, injuries and property damage - frum crashes all Ihe nalion's high, ways, The lnstltul.e Is wholly supported by auto Insurers. Contents may be published whole or In. part with attrlbutiun, This,publlcation is printed on recycled paper. (1} ISSN 0018-988X Vol. 31, 0.8, Sept. 28, 1996 On the Inside Side impact protection standards in United tates and Europe go in different directions p.2 Head protec:tion isn't addressed in either 0.5. or European rule ...... p.3 Three dummies in use, and a fourth is proposed KiCking A p.5 Different car designs may result from different side impact standards p.6 Adding side tests to NeAP p.8 Results of real crashes show why side impact protection is so irnportant....p.9 Others foUowing U.S., Europe ........p.l0 Occupants on side opposite impacts are at considerable risk, too p.ll r0V. ~O' ~ 110 / 'rieL. 'lIn '{} ...q.s/~ e, Side I f11pact Issue