Safety Belt Buckle Inertial Responses in Laboratory and Crash Tests
1995; Linguagem: Inglês
10.4271/950887
ISSN2688-3627
AutoresEdward A. Moffatt, Terry Thomas, Eddie Cooper,
Tópico(s)Traffic and Road Safety
ResumoLaboratory testing measured the response of a 1984 Chevrolet S-10 Blazer seat belt buckle to impact on the back of the buckle. The peak acceleration, pulse duration and webbing tension were recorded to map the unique circumstances necessary to inertially unlatch the buckle. The conditions necessary to inertially unlatch the buckle in the laboratory were compared with the measured buckle responses in fifteen sled tests and rollover crash tests using anthropometric dummies. All of the crash tested buckles remained latched and all had the dynamic response well below those required to produce inertial unlatching. Dummy hip areas were measured to be significantly stiffer than humans. Buckle accelerations measured in the parlor trick of intentionally striking the hip with a buckle are not representative of crash conditions. (A) For the covering abstract of the conference see IRRD 875168.
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