Event data recorders in the analysis of frontal impacts.

Author(s)
German, A. Comeau, J.-L. McClafferty, K.J. Shkrum, M.J. & Tiessen, P.F.
Year
Abstract

Evaluations of crash protection safety features require measures for quantifying impact severity. Velocity change (delta-V) is the major descriptor of collision severity used in most real-world crash databases. One of the limitations of delta-V is that it does not account for the time over which the crash pulse occurs (delta-t). Late model GM vehicles equipped with event data recorders capture the cumulative delta-V in 10 ms intervals over the crash pulse. Deceleration can be readily calculated from these data and provides a complementary measure of severity that has not previously been available for real world crashes. The relationship between maximum delta-V and deceleration was examined for different vehicle platforms involved in real world frontal impacts and frontal crash tests. Maximum deceleration was observed to be closely correlated to the maximum delta-V. (Author/publisher)

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Publication

Library number
20072253 a15 ST (In: ST 20072253 a S) /91 / IT CD-ROM850896
Source

In: Proceedings of the 51st Annual Conference of the Association for the Advancement of Automotive Medicine AAAM, Melbourne, Australia, October 14-17, 2007, p. 225-243, 8 ref.

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