Introduction of the regulation of pedestrian head protection in Japan.

Author(s)
Nishimoto, T.
Year
Abstract

Pedestrian fatalities account for about 30% of all traffic accident fatalities in Japan. As head injuries in particular often lead to death or serious injury, it is important to reduce their severity, and so a new regulation for head protection is currently being drawn up. The regulation is based on the results of discussions by IHRA, and applies to passenger vehicles and trucks built on a passenger car chassis weighing 2500 kg or less. The test procedure involves a sub-system test that uses two head form impactors, an adult head form and a child head form. The test area is zoned for both adult and child heads impacting against the bonnet top, and the regulation requires both adult and child head injuries to be reduced to the required level. All new models of applicable vehicles introduced after 2005 will have to comply with the new regulation. After 2010, all new applicable vehicles will have to comply. Vehicles that have difficulty meeting the regulation requirements, such as low-bonnet-height vehicles and certain types of trucks, will have a two-year grace period in which to comply. This report explains the regulation in detail. For the covering abstract see ITRD E825082.

Publication

Library number
C 31020 (In: C 30848 CD-ROM) /84 / ITRD E124462
Source

In: Proceedings of the 18th International Technical Conference on Enhanced Safety of Vehicles ESV, Nagoya, Japan, May 19-22, 2003, 9 p.

Our collection

This publication is one of our other publications, and part of our extensive collection of road safety literature, that also includes the SWOV publications.