Updated Evaluation of Size and Mass Effects in Front-to-Front Crashes Involving Light Vehicles 2009-01-0375
Studies used 1981–2006 FARS and state crash data to examine the relative importance of vehicular, driver, and environmental factors in influencing odds of driver fatality in two-vehicle (car-to-car, light truck-to-car, and light truck-to-light truck) frontal crashes for 1981–2003 model-year vehicles. It was found that all vehicle factors, including vehicle frontal stiffness, have a second order effect compared to vehicle weight. Most of the driver factors included were found to be highly significant. Assumptions and methodology used by other vehicle size/weight safety studies were also evaluated. Results show trends similar to those of other key studies, with one notable exception.
Citation: Eyges, V. and Padmanaban, J., "Updated Evaluation of Size and Mass Effects in Front-to-Front Crashes Involving Light Vehicles," SAE Int. J. Passeng. Cars – Mech. Syst. 2(1):555-564, 2009, https://doi.org/10.4271/2009-01-0375. Download Citation
Author(s):
Vitaly Eyges, Jeya Padmanaban
Affiliated:
JP Research, Inc
Pages: 10
Event:
SAE World Congress & Exhibition
ISSN:
1946-3995
e-ISSN:
1946-4002
Also in:
SAE International Journal of Passenger Cars - Mechanical Systems-V118-6EJ, SAE International Journal of Passenger Cars - Mechanical Systems-V118-6
Related Topics:
Frontal collisions
Vehicle drivers
Crashes
Fatal injuries
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