Hot_Air wrote: ↑Tue Sep 05, 2023 5:06 pm
The rider in the video wore Dainese race leathers with an integrated D-Air system. I think (?) this airbag covers the chest and neck.
He suffered a broken back, sternum and wrist but wasn’t killed. The police said he would have died without his airbag. Nonetheless, his injuries were sadly life changing.
Not trivialising the incident, nor having a go at the choice to use an airbag, nor yet at police accident investigation technique...
...but that's a completely impossible claim to make.
The only way to prove it would be to have two identical crashes, one with and one without.
As it stands, there are so many random factors involved about how the rider's body impacted it's impossible to say what the airbag did, or didn't, do. He could have landed on his head, broken his neck, then the airbag would have achieved nothing useful.
Manufacturers seem remarkable coy when it comes to providing any information that's in 'real life' terms. I recall doing some number-crunching on a top of the range chest protector when they were the latest thing a decade or so ago - not easy, because they'd mixed up their units which made it difficult to do the sums, and my calculation was that it could just about absorb the impact resulting from being hit by an average sized chicken at 30 mph. From that, I inferred that with your body mass behind it, impact a car with your chest at 30 mph it was unlikely to achieve anything meaningful.
It would be interesting if there was a computer model that could be used... would save a lot of crash test dummies!
I'm meeting Paul Varnsverry tomorrow... I'll have a chat.