Help Sitemap Home Skip Navigation Contact Us Disability Statement


T in the Park

Premium Article !

Your account has been frozen. For your available options click the below button.

Options

Premium Article !

To read this article in full you must have registered and have a Premium Content Subscription with the Scotland On Sunday site.

Subscribe

Registered Article !

To read this article in full you must be registered with the site.

Latest in car safety: airbags on the outside



Click on thumbnail to view image
Click on thumbnail to view image
Click on thumbnail to view image
Click on thumbnail to view image
Click on thumbnail to view image

Published Date: 15 June 2008
THE lives of hundreds of pedestrians are set to be saved each year in the UK after a major car firm revealed it is close to perfecting exterior airbags.
A Toyota subsidiary is fine-tuning a system which, in the event of a collision with a pedestrian, deploys airbags at the front of the bonnet and just below the windscreen.

The system uses sensors linked to a computer system which constantly scans
the road ahead and calculates if and when the car is about to hit a pedestrian. In the split seconds before an accident, the airbags burst open to cushion the impact.

In the UK alone, 675 pedestrians are killed each year in accidents in which they are struck by cars and another 6,375 are seriously injured.

The airbag system has been developed by the Nagoya-based Toyoda Gosei. The company designs and makes airbags and other safety equipment for a range of car manufacturers around the world.

The designs were recently exhibited at a motor show in Japan. The system uses a combination of radar and infra-red sensors. The radar scans the road hundreds of metres ahead for anything that could be a pedestrian. The infra red detector looks for signs of body heat from the object.

The front airbag is designed to reduce waist injuries in adults and head injuries in children. The upper air bag should reduce head injuries from pedestrians being flung forward on to the windscreen.

When the bonnet airbag deploys, it covers the entire width of the car and the bottom two-thirds of the windscreen as well as the upper quarter of the bonnet. The bag also protects the pedestrian from being hurt by the windscreen wipers.

The airbags are designed to rapidly deflate after any incident to reduce the "bouncy castle effect" in which pedestrians could be catapulted back on to the road or into the path of other vehicles.

Experts are now working through millions of calculations for thousands of cars so they can make sure that the airbags go off at the right time, depending on the model of car.

A spokesman for the company told a Japanese technology news service he was unable to say when the firm expected to start production.

He said: "We have almost completed the development of the pedestrian protection airbags. We are now calculating the precise timing to set off the airbags. If the timing is wrong, the airbags cannot protect pedestrians."

The experts hope that the combination of the sensors and computer technology will help them overcome the problems which have dogged the concept of outside airbags: how to tell the difference between hitting a person and hitting an inanimate object, and how to tell that an impact is about to happen.

No pricing information was available directly from the company. But motor industry reports have suggested that the sensor system would cost about £150 and the airbags something in the region of £200.

The technology has been given a cautious welcome by motoring organisations.

Neil Greig, of the Institute of Advanced Motorists' Motoring Trust, said: "It's a very good idea.

However, this kind of thing is unlikely to become widespread unless the Government makes it compulsory.

"If you're in a showroom and you have the option of spending £500 on a fancy new sound system or spending it on a system to protect pedestrians, most drivers will go for the sound system."

David Evans from Which? Car said: "Anything that improves the chances of occupants and pedestrians in crashes should be encouraged.

"But there needs to be evidence of the benefits, rather than loading up a car with gadgets as a means of creating the impression of improved safety."

A spokeswoman for the RAC Foundation said: "It's great news that vehicle manufacturers are thinking not only about looking to protect the occupants but also people outside the vehicles."

Toyoda Gosei had no-one available for comment when they were contacted by Scotland on Sunday.



The full article contains 673 words and appears in Scotland On Sunday newspaper.
Page 1 of 1

  • Last Updated: 14 June 2008 7:33 PM
  • Source: Scotland On Sunday
  • Location: Scotland
 
1

Guga II,

Rockall 15/06/2008 03:16:32
So, when some drunk staggers across the road in front of you, the sensors detect his body, you manage to brake in time to avoid hitting him, but the airbags deploy. You are then lumbered with a bill of £3-400 for new airbags, for no good reason.

Or, you are driving down the motorway and the airbags deploy of their own volition when a large seagull flies across the front of your car. The airbags deploy and you crash into the car in front as you can't see it.

Basically, more expensive gadgets to go wrong.
2

Loki - The Scourge of the Schemies,

EH1 15/06/2008 09:14:15
It would surely be far more sensible to develop some kind of automatic blade such as one would see on a bulldozer in order to protect the front of one's vehicle from scratching or denting when in the act of colliding with a pedestrian.
3

Douglas,

Bathgate 15/06/2008 09:20:38
Honda have been working on a system to mop up the tears of greetin faced doomsayers. It's thought that a test vehicle is due to be delivered to Mr. Guga of Luddite Avenue, Buttpain, Rockall very soon.
4

Joey Pica,

Corner Bed ICU 15/06/2008 10:25:15
How will these pedestrian know which vehicle to have the accident with. Its going to be too late if they make a mistake and chose one of the 27 million not fitted with em!
5

joppa jock,

Huntingdon 15/06/2008 11:02:01
Whatever happened to the rubber mudwings that used to be on post office vans? We're too committed to style in modern vehicles. Perhaps manufacturers should be considering alternative materials for bodywork that would yield on impact without causing massive injuries to all involved. Mind you, it's only a matter of time before the 50 mph speedlimit is imposed right across the country once again. This will conserve fuel as well as reducing accident rates. They've done it before and be sure they'll do it again.
6

The Former Mr. Angry,

Perth 15/06/2008 12:54:28
Main thing I would be concerned about (apart from pedestrian safety) is that passing neds or drunks might find it really amusing to try the "bouncy castle" affect by falling or jumping on the bonnet.

From another story I think a major improvement would be the enforcement of speed limits (especially in town areas) would be the average speed cameras. No more decelerating before the camera then foot down after.
7

AD in sunny Livingston,

15/06/2008 15:28:09
Surely, in a lot of instances, it's not so much to do with the force that you hit the car at as the force/angle at which you hit the road.
8

Hickory,

US 16/06/2008 15:38:27
Aye, we must insure that stupid drunks canna fall under a lorry too! The answer is to 'ave a flagman to proceed in front of all vehicles with a bright orange flag. I can see it now, Aye Jimmy, ye ran over me flagman. Solution.... don't step in front of traffic ye dummies!
9

truthsleuth,

19/06/2008 00:34:12
1 Guga II,
and other petrol addicts.


"If you're in a showroom and you have the option of spending £500 on a fancy new sound system or spending it on a system to protect pedestrians, most drivers will go for the sound system." - just how petrolheads think (they think?)
When some pr*** of a drunk petrolhead hurtling along a 30mph road at 60mph he will probably be in a car that has an engine tuned for 150mph, external air bags that do not work and a brain that never works
10

truthsleuth,

19/06/2008 00:36:21
I'm sure some of the contributors to this article are not old enough to drive or are braindead.

 

Comment on this Story

 

In order to post comments you must Register or Sign In

 
 
 
  

 
 


Sister Newspapers:
Press Complaints Commission

This website and its associated newspaper adheres to the Press Complaints Commission’s Code of Practice. If you have a complaint about editorial content which relates to inaccuracy or intrusion, then contact the Editor by clicking here.

If you remain dissatisfied with the response provided then you can contact the PCC by clicking here.