Roof Strength and Injury Risk in Rollover Crashes of Passenger Cars and SUVs.

Author(s)
Brumbelow, M. & Teoh, E.R.
Year
Abstract

A 2009 study by the Insurance Institute for Highway Safety found that midsize sport utility vehicles (SUV) with stronger roofs, as measured in quasi-static tests, had lower risk of ejection and lower risk of injury for nonejected drivers. The objective of the present study was to determine whether a similar association exists for other vehicle groups. Twelve small passenger cars were evaluated according to Federal Motor Vehicle Safety Standard 216 test conditions extended to 10 inches of plate displacement. Crash databases in 14 states provided more than 20,000 single-vehicle rollovercrashes involving these vehicles. Logistic regression analyses were used to evaluate the effect of roof strength on the rate of driver injury whileassessing and controlling for the effects of driver age, vehicle stability, state, and other factors where necessary. Small cars with stronger roofs had lower overall rates of serious injury, lower rates of ejection, and lower rates of injury for nonejected drivers. Although the effect on ejection was somewhat smaller for cars than for SUVs, the overall pattern of injury results was consistent. For roof strength-to-weight ratio measured at5 inches (SWR5), a one-unit increase (e.g., from 2.0 to 3.0) was associated with a 22% reduction in risk of incapacitating or fatal driver injury in single- vehicle rollovers. This compares with a 24% reduction estimated for a similar change in roof strength among midsize SUVs. The association between vehicle roof strength and occupant injury risk in rollover crashesappears robust across different vehicle groups and across roof SWR5 values, varying from just more than 1.5 to just less than 4.0. If roofs were toincrease in strength by one SWR5, a 20-25% percent reduction in risk of serious injury in rollovers would be expected. Still, even if all vehicle roofs were as strong as the strongest roof measured, many rollover injuriesstill would occur, indicating the need for additional research and countermeasures. The full text of this paper may be found at: http://www-nrd.nhtsa.dot.gov/pdf/esv/esv21/09-0502.pdf For the covering abstract see ITRD E145407.

Publication

Library number
C 50009 (In: C 49887 CD-ROM) /91 / ITRD E145600
Source

In: Proceedings of the 21st International Technical Conference on Enhanced Safety of Vehicles ESV, Stuttgart, Germany, June 15-18, 2009, Pp.

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