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Technical Paper

Diagnosing Vehicle Aggressiveness for Pedestrian Leg Impact and Development of Efficient Front End Energy Management Systems

2010-04-12
2010-01-1168
Worldwide involvement in Global Technical Regulation (GTR) discussion shows the increasing importance of pedestrian safety as a global concern. Vehicle front styling plays an important role in vehicle to pedestrian impact. Front styling can change the pedestrian kinematics and injury levels during an impact. Key elements of bumper front are Fascia, Upper & Lower Grille, Hood, spoiler or undertray, bumper beam and height of these components from ground level, determine the vehicle aggressiveness for pedestrian safety. This paper presents an approach to diagnose the vehicle front aggressiveness for pedestrian leg impact. Eight different vehicle bumper front configurations from ‘minis’ to ‘sedans’ are studied for lower leg impact cases, to understand the bumper stiffness profile (stiffness in upper, middle and lower load path).
Technical Paper

Part 581, IIHS Damageability and Lower Leg Impact Compliant Bumper - Challenges and Solutions

2012-04-16
2012-01-0274
The worldwide involvement in global technical regulation (GTR) discussion shows the increasing importance of pedestrian safety as a global concern. In the US, bumper systems are designed for the Part 581 bumper standard and IIHS (Insurance Institute of Highway Safety) bumper structural test protocols. There has also been discussion in the North American automotive industry about the merits of incorporating some measure of pedestrian protection into their systems as well. Compliance with the potential pedestrian leg requirements creates a design conflict with current bumper damageability standards and possibly CAFÉ laws. The difficulties of designing a bumper system that is rigid enough to protect the vehicle in low speed crashes and, at the same time, compliant enough to protect a pedestrian raise questions as to whether these ideas are compatible.
Technical Paper

Small Overlap Impact Countermeasures for Automobiles

2015-04-14
2015-01-1491
Automotive OEMs, insurance agencies and regulatory bodies are continuously looking at various accident statistics and proper ways of evaluating unaccounted (as per current regulations and safety ratings) accident scenarios to improve the safety standards of cars. Small overlap and oblique impacts during which a corner of a car hits a tree or the corner of another vehicle are two such situations. Most of the vehicles that are on road scored low when tested for these impact scenarios. This paper focuses on development of energy-absorbing members, using engineering thermoplastics materials, which can be mounted on the BIW of a vehicle, as countermeasures to small overlap impact. Various design and material configurations options, including metal plastic and composite plastic structural members mounted on the BIW are evaluated through CAE studies, against small overlap/oblique impact scenarios.
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