Publication

The frontal-impact response of a booster-seated child-size PMHS

This paper presents the response of a child-size Post Mortem Human Subject in a series of frontal impact sled tests. Specific focus is on the whole-body kinematics and resulting head trajectories under two different restraint conditions (booster seat and standard belt, booster seat and force-limiting pre-tensioning belt) in a rear seat environment. At 48 km/h, the pretensioning, force-limiting seatbelt reduced the forward excursion of both the head (353 mm vs. 424 mm) and the h-point (120 mm vs. 152 mm) compared to the standard system. Maximum torso pitch was similar for both seatbelts. There were no apparent adverse effects of the force-limiting or pretensioning for the limited sets of conditions considered here.

Author(s)
Francisco J. Lopez-Valdes, Jason Forman, Joseph Ash, Matt Kindig, John Lamp,
Richard Kent, Katarina Bohman, Ola Boström
Research area
Human body protection
Publication type
Conference paper
Published in
International IRCOBI Conference on the Biomechanics of Impact, 2009.
Year of publication
2009