The Effect of Limiting Shoulder Belt Load with Air Bag Restraint 950886
The dilemma of using a shoulder belt force limiter with a 3-point belt system is selecting a limit load that will balance the reduced risk of significant thoracic injury due to the shoulder belt loading of the chest against the increased risk of significant head injury due to the greater upper torso motion allowed by the shoulder belt load limiter. However, with the use of air bags, this dilemma is more manageable since it only occurs for non-deploy accidents where the risk of significant head injury is low even for the unbelted occupant. A study was done using a validated occupant dynamics model of the Hybrid III dummy to investigate the effects that a prescribed set of shoulder belt force limits had on head and thoracic responses for 48 and 56 km/h barrier simulations with driver air bag deployment and for threshold crash severity simulations with no air bag deployment. For the belt/bag/occupant configuration that was evaluated, the analysis gives an optimum shoulder belt load limit that minimizes the dummy responses in the 56 km/h simulation without significantly increasing the risk of significant head injury in the non-deploy simulations.
Citation: Mertz, H., Williamson, J., and Vander Lugt, D., "The Effect of Limiting Shoulder Belt Load with Air Bag Restraint," SAE Technical Paper 950886, 1995, https://doi.org/10.4271/950886. Download Citation
Author(s):
Harold J. Mertz, James E. Williamson, Donald A. Vander Lugt
Affiliated:
General Motors Corp.
Pages: 10
Event:
International Congress & Exposition
ISSN:
0148-7191
e-ISSN:
2688-3627
Also in:
Advances in Occupant Protection Technologies for the Mid-Nineties-SP-1077, Air Bag Development and Performance-PT-88, SAE 1995 Transactions: Journal of Passenger Cars-V104-6
Related Topics:
Airbag systems
Head injuries
Torso
Vehicle occupants
Vehicle drivers
Simulation and modeling
Crashes
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