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Rollover scenarios in Europe
(2005)
Rollover accidents seem to be a rising problem in Europe and therefore the systematic of this accident scenario should be investigated. Based on statistical investigations on major European accident databases for different countries a series of 73 real world rollover accidents was analysed. These cases were reconstructed using PC-Crash and preliminary categorised using a modified USbased rollover classification. In a first step, the rollover events were reconstructed from the point of conflict to the vehicle- rest position. The vehicles kinematics as well as its linear and rotational velocities were derived. In a second step typical velocity characteristics as well as kinematics were identified and the events categorised according to these criteria. Based on these results four main categories were defined, covering all reconstructed accidents. This categorisation was based on mechanical parameters (rotatory and translator kinematical data of the vehicle). Significant differences can be seen for different scenarios for the "first phase of rollover".
Portugal has the highest rate of road fatalities in Europe (2002 and for Eur-15 - CARE database). For this highest rate, the accidents involving pedestrians and motorcycle occupants have a higher contribution than the European average. In the last years, especially accidents involving motorcycles have been investigated and currently two different projects are being carried out, one related with motorcycles accidents and the other with pedestrian accidents. In these projects, countermeasures among others to reduce the fatalities between these two types of road users are being studied. These accidents are investigated with the commercial accident reconstruction software PCCRASH but also new methodologies based on multibody dynamics are in development in order to more accurately study these two types of accidents. In this paper, the methodologies in use for accident reconstruction and new methodologies in development are presented. Speeding his found to be one of the major causes of road fatalities for pedestrians and motorcycle occupants. In the case of motorcycle accidents, these involve mainly young drivers. Aspects as social behavior are also important to understand the causes of some of these accidents. Some examples of accidents occurring in Portugal, involving especially motorcycles and pedestrians are presented and discussed.
The improvement of passive car security devices led to a reduction of injuries, especially of the head, the neck and the torso mainly due to the airbag function. The passenger's foot and ankle could not profit from this development. Some investigators even reported a progression of leg injuries (1). In this study, we investigated a current collective of patients with foot and ankle fractures or severe soft tissue injuries in relation with defined crash parameters. Special interest was paid to the car's footwell.
The so-called "seat-belt injuries" or "seat-belt syndromes", described as 2-point seat-belt injuries, contain heavy inflection injuries of the lumbal spinal column, combined with heavy abdominal injuries as rupture of the upper intestinal bold or heavy injuries of the upper entrails. With "playing" children in the font of the car, with inappropriate plant of 3-point belts, identical injuries can occur.
Road safety is a major preoccupation of the European Commission and the road transport industry and depends on numerous significant factors. In order to improve road safety and to plan effective safety improvement actions for truck transport, we must first identify the problems to be addressed, i.e. what are the main causes of truck accidents. The ETAC project, initiated by the European Commission and the IRU, was launched in order to set up a heavy goods vehicle accident causation study across European countries to identify future actions which could contribute to the improvement of road safety. The results will be based on a detailed analysis of truck accident data collected in seven European countries according to a common methodology which has been elaborated through numerous national and European projects. This paper describes the common methodology used to collect the information on the scene of the accident and to analyse the data so that the reconstruction of the crash events may be carried out. CEESAR proposes a methodology using its experience gained from over 10 years of accident data collection. This methodology is based on an in-depth investigation of the parameters involved in-an accident and linked to the driver, the vehicle, the road and their environment. In-depth investigation requires accident investigator presence on the scene of the accident in order to collect volatile information such as marks on the road, weather conditions, visibility, state and equipment of the vehicle, driver interview. Later, passive and active information is gathered, either at the hospital for the driver, at the garage for the vehicle or on the spot for the road geometry. A reconstruction carried out with the help of specific software and the analysis of the data collected and calculated enables the identification of the main causes of the accident and the future actions to plan in order to improve road safety as regards truck traffic.
Interaction of road environment, vehicle and human factors in the causation of pedestrian accidents
(2005)
The UK On-the-Spot project (OTS) completed over 1500 in-depth investigations of road accidents during 2000-2003 and is continuing for a further 3 years. Cases were sampled from two regions of England using rotating shifts to cover all days of the week and all hours of the day and night. Research teams were dispatched to accidents notified to police during the shifts; arrival time to the scene of the accident was generally less than 20 minutes. The methodology of OTS includes sophisticated systems for describing accident causation and the interaction of road, vehicle and human factors. The purpose of this paper is to describe and illustrate these systems by reference to pedestrian accidents. This type of analysis is intended to provide an insight into how and why pedestrian accidents occur in order to assist the development of effective road, vehicle and behavioural countermeasures.
This paper reviews briefly the evolution of the investigation of transport accidents from the early beginnings when individual events were studied but systematic data was not collected. In the transport modes other than on the roads, accident investigation early on, even of single events, was important in introducing safety improvements. Road accidents, however, evolved enormously with the growth of car ownership without any comparable political response to the consequent deaths and injuries, equivalent to what happened with the other modes. From the 1950s data bases started to contribute to our knowledge of the epidemiology of road traffic injuries, and in-depth sample studies have contributed much to the body of knowledge in the last 30 years. However, even the basic input and output variables of a crash, its severity and the seriousness of the outcomes in terms of injuries and their consequences are not complete or agreed upon. Issues of experimental design and sampling are discussed. It is proposed that the most important area for current research to address is the effect of population variations on injury outcomes. The need for the establishment of good data bases for active safety issues is emphasised with the consequent need for better links between the research community and the police.
Die Lastübertragung von den Fahrzeugrädern auf die Fahrbahntafel wird beschrieben, und es wird eine Übersicht der ermüdungsempfindlichen Schweissnahtbereiche von Deckblech, Längssteifen und Querträgern gegeben. Die charakteristischen Schwachpunkte der Schweissverbindungen werden in Skizzen dargestellt.
Nowadays airbags are part of the standard equipment in almost all new cars. While airbags are saving an increasing number of people from severe injuries and death in moderate and high speed crashes, they do not completely prevent dashboard injuries. The most common mechanism in dashboard injuries is a posteriorly directed force to the proximal tibia with the knee flexed. This may occur during a motor vehicle frontal impact accident when a knee of the driver or the front-seat passenger strikes the dashboard. The posterior force can be combined with a abducting or rotational force leading to concomitant lateral or posterolateral injury. Car and airbag manufacturers therefore develop special inflatable systems to reduce the impact force in dashboard injuries. Every new inflatable system, however, has to be evaluated in out of position situations in which the system might cause injuries to certain body areas. Therefore, we investigated a new kneebag system in different critical seating positions of post mortem test subjects (PMTS). The tested knee airbag module is a folded airbag (18 litre volume) which is installed below the lower section of the instrument panel of a passenger car. Using four PMTS (2 male, 2 female, age 36"67) the following positions were tested: normal seating position, knee flexed >90 degrees and knee flexed <60 degrees in static deployment tests with direct contact. In addition a dynamic test (48.8kph, AAMA-pulse) was carried out with the PMTS belted in a normal seating position. The inflation phase and the impact of the system on the knee/lower leg were analysed by high speed videos. After the test the lower legs of the PMTS were examined by Xray and autopsy. All soft tissue injuries and bone fractures were recorded. All the tests could be evaluated. Except some superficial skin lesions in the impact area no fracture of the bones around the knee and no knee ligament and tendon injuries were observed. Neither video analysis nor autopsy of the PMTS showed any critical contact injuries caused by the inflation process of the bag. Therefore, it can be concluded that in the tested seating positions which are the most critical for the knee area the knee bag system is safe.
Der Beitrag behandelt ein Forschungsvorhaben, das die Instandsetzung und Ertüchtigung von Stahlbrücken, deren orthotrope Fahrbahntafeln durch Rissbildung beschädigt sind, die vorzugsweise im Bereich von Schweissnähten zwischen den Anschlüssen der Längsrippen und dem Deckblech aufgetreten ist, zum Ziel hat. Ursache der Schäden sind Materialermüdung infolge des stark gestiegenen Verkehrsaufkommens schwerer Fahrzeuge gegenüber der Bauzeit in den sechziger Jahren und die seitdem erheblich gestiegenen Achslasten. Durch das kraftschlüssige Aufkleben von Stahlblechen auf das Deckblech sollen dessen Steifigkeit erhöht und damit die Durchbiegungen verringert werden. Die Spannungen in den anschliessenden Schweissnaehten nehmen ab und können bei ausreichender Dicke des aufzuklebenden Bleches auf eine nicht mehr ermüdungsrelevante Größenordnung zurückgefuehrt werden. Wegen der sehr komplexen Gesamtaufgabe wurden die Untersuchungen in vier Teilbereiche aufgegliedert: 1. Computer-Simulation der Beanspruchung einer orthotropen Platte unter einem normierten Ermüdungslastmodell. 2. Optimierung der Klebtechnologie. 3. Dauerfestigkeitsuntersuchungen (Versuche). 4. Entwicklung und Prüfung von Konstruktionsdetails. Die Projekte 1 und 2 sind bereits erfolgreich abgeschlossen. Das Projekt 3 steht kurz vor dem Abschluss (10/2005). Projekt 4 wird in 2006 durchgeführt.
Der Allgemeine Deutsche Automobilclub e. V. (ADAC) und die Bundesanstalt für Straßenwesen (BASt) veranstalteten am 7. und 8. Oktober 2003 in Wiesbaden ihr 5. Symposium "Sicher fahren in Europa". Nach 1991, 1994, 1997 und 2000 trafen sich erneut über 200 Fachleute aus Wissenschaft, Politik, Verwaltung, Industrie, Wirtschaft und Verbänden aus ganz Europa und einigen außereuropäischen Ländern, trugen neue Forschungsergebnisse vor und erörterten aktuelle Ansätze zur Erhöhung der Sicherheit im Straßenverkehr. Dabei ging es in Vortrags- und Diskussionsbeiträgen vor allem darum, folgende verkehrspolitischen Herausforderungen und Entwicklungen für eine europaweite Verkehrssicherheitsarbeit zu beleuchten: - die Umsetzung des 3. Verkehrssicherheits-Aktionsprogrammes der EU-Kommission bis 2010, dessen Diskussion gerade begonnen hat, - die zusätzlichen Probleme und Herausforderungen für die Verkehrssicherheit, die ab 2004 durch den EU-Beitritt von 10 weiteren Mitgliedsländern entstehen, - das Bestreben vieler EU-Mitgliedsstaaten, ihre nationale Identität und ihre regionalen Besonderheiten auch auf dem Gebiet der Verkehrssicherheit zu bewahren, um die Akzeptanz und Effizienz von praktischen Maßnahmen zu sichern, ein Ziel, dem sich auch der "EU-Konvent zur Zukunft Europas" verschrieben hat. Diesen ebenso aktuellen wie grundsätzlichen Anforderungen entsprach das Veranstaltungsprogramm mit seinen verkehrspolitischen Eröffnungs-vorträgen und mit drei Fachsitzungen - zur Verbesserung der Fahrzeugsicherheit, - der Verbesserung der Straßensicherheit und - zur Verbesserung des Verhaltens von Verkehrsteilnehmern. Eine Podiumsdiskussion "Zur Harmonisierung von Verkehrsüberwachung und Sanktionen" schloss die Veranstaltung ab.
As investigations by BASt have shown, a bond between concrete surfaces and bases may be a disadvantage when water penetrates via joints and from the sides if the bond becomes partially detached at an early stage. Free water may penetrate into the area between the concrete surface and the base and build up in areas where the bond is still intact. The high pressure caused by lorry wheels rolling over the pavement causes hydrodynamic pumping. This creates very high flow speeds with considerable corrosion power. This results in the base course surface being eroded in the areas where heavy vehicles drive over the road and may even lead to water and fine particles from the base courses being expelled through the longitudinal joints between the pavement slab and the lower hard shoulder or first overtaking lane. The erosion of the base leads unavoidably to the bearing conditions deteriorating and increased loading of the concrete surface. Cracks may occur and, later stepping-off and tilting of the plates components. This significantly deteriorates the evenness and consequently the service value of the road. This finally leads to a reduction in the service life of the concrete surface. To avoid such damage water which has penetrated must be able to lose pressure and to then seep away. A possible solution is: A nonwoven fabric substance between concrete suface and bound base course. This construction method has proved himselve on numerous test road sections and were rightly included in the new Codes of Practice for the Standardisation of the Upper Structure of Traffic-Bearing Surfaces (Richtlinien für die Standardisierung des Oberbaues von Verkehrsflächen- RStO).
Federal highway A 26 in Germany : reinforced dams in soft soils - control method according DIN 1054
(2004)
In 2001 the construction of the Federal Highway A 26 in Lower Saxony (north of Germany) was started. In this area the underground is without any substantial bearing capacity as it consists of soft layers ( clay, peat) with a thickness of up to 12 m. Because it was not possible to exchange the soil neither completely nor partially pre-loading procedure (consolidation method) was chosen for this construction. Short- and long-term stability are ensured by the use of high-tensile fabrics for reinforcement at the dam basis. The vertical and horizontal deformations and the stress changes in the soil, caused by the pre-load procedure, has to be controlled by special geotechnical measurements. Additionally, in the higher parts of the dam the strain behaviour of the high-tensile fabrics is measured. These measurements form the basis for the application of the control method according DIN 1054. In this article, the special circumstances of this project are described. Further on the geotechnical measurements, the winning and evaluation of the necessary parameters of the subsoil, and the consequences of these data for the ongoing of the project are laid down. Intermediate results of the geotechnical measurements are described.
Zum gegenwärtigen Zeitpunkt werden verschiedene Ansätze diskutiert, wie der Verbesserung der Straßenverkehrssicherheit durch den Einsatz moderner Fahrerassistenzsysteme (FAS) neue Impulse gegeben werden können. Unter dem Dach der von der Europäischen Kommission gemeinsam mit der Industrie im Frühjahr 2002 ins Leben gerufenen eSafety-Initiative soll die Entwicklung und Implementierung "Intelligenter Integrierter Sicherheitssysteme" (Intelligent Integrated Road Safety Systems) koordiniert und vorangetrieben werden. Erwartet werden hiervon entscheidende Beiträge zur Erreichung der bis zum Jahr 2010 angestrebten Halbierung der Zahl der Verkehrstoten in Europa, entsprechend dem Weissbuch der Europäischen Kommission. Intelligente Unterstützung des Fahrers meint in diesem Zusammenhang die Berücksichtigung des Gesamtsystems "Fahrer-Fahrzeug-Umwelt". Für die fahrzeugseitige Umsetzung der Unterstützungsfunktion wurden verschiedene Ausformungsgrade (zum Beispiel Information, Warnung, korrigierender Eingriff) vorgeschlagen und entwickelt. Die BASt ist an einer Reihe von Projekten und Arbeitsgruppen beteiligt, die sich direkt oder indirekt mit Fragen befassen, die sich bei der Entwicklung und Bewertung intelligenter FAS zur Beeinflussung der Fahrzeuggeschwindigkeit stellen. Im Mittelpunkt stehen dabei vor allem Fragen der Sicherheitsbewertung und der Machbarkeit, wie zum Beispiel - Realisierung der fahrzeugseitigen Umsetzung, - Kosten-Nutzen-Gesichtspunkte, - Rechtliche Aspekte, - Voraussetzungen der Datenbasis. Beispielsweise ist die BASt an der von ERTICO koordinierten "SpeedAlert"-Initiative beteiligt. Ziel dieser Aktivität ist die europaweite Implementierung eines Geschwindigkeitswarnsystems. An der hierzu im Jahre 2001 gegründeten "SpeedAlert" Arbeitsgruppe beteiligen sich Industrie und Verwaltung.
Umweltschutz in der Bundesrepublik Deutschland wird seit zwei Jahrzehnten zunehmend durch die rechtlichen Vorgaben der Europäischen Gemeinschaft geprägt " beginnend mit der Umweltverträglichkeitsprüfungs-Richtlinie über die Umweltinformationsrichtlinie, die Vogelschutzrichtlinie, die Fauna-Flora-Habitat-Richtlinie und die Plan-Umweltprüfungs-Richtlinie bis hin zur Umgebungslärm-Richtlinie wurde und wird das deutsche Recht nicht nur materiell verändert, sondern auch in seinen Strukturen und seinen Verfahrensregelungen. Auf die Straßenplanung haben sich in jüngerer Zeit insbesondere die Vogelschutzrichtlinie und die Fauna-Flora-Habitat-Richtlinie maßgeblich ausgewirkt , die Plan-Umweltprüfungs-Richtlinie und die Umgebungslärm-Richtlinie können eine gleich große Bedeutung erlangen. Angesichts dessen befasste sich der Arbeitsausschuss "Straßenrecht" der Forschungsgesellschaft für Straßen- und Verkehrswesen in seinem Forschungsseminar am 22. und 23. September 2003 an der Universität des Saarlandes in Saarbrücken eingehend mit Rechtsproblemen von "Umsetzung und Vollzug von EG-Richtlinien im Straßenrecht" auf der Grundlage der in diesem Band veröffentlichten vier Referate. Stefan STRICK schildert in seinem Referat über "Umsetzung der Umgebungslärm-Richtlinie in nationales Recht" zunächst die Grundstrukturen des europäischen Lärmschutzkonzepts und erläutert die zeitlichen Vorgaben für dessen Übertragung in das deutsche Recht. Die Umsetzung der Richtlinie soll im Bundes-Immissionsschutzgesetz erfolgen, wobei im Gesetz selbst zwar die wesentlichen Regelungen getroffen werden sollen, aber zur Konkretisierung " auch in verfahrensrechtlicher Hinsicht " Rechtsverordnungen vorgesehen sind. Darüber hinaus enthält das Referat Einzelheiten der beabsichtigten Normierung im Rahmen des Immissionsschutzrechts und zu ihren rechtlichen Auswirkungen. In seinem Referat über "Die Umsetzung der FFH-Richtlinie in das deutsche Straßenrecht" wendet sich Hans-Peter MICHLER eingangs der Identifizierung und dem Schutz von Fauna-Flora-Habitat-Gebieten zu und stellt das Verfahren zur Ausweisung derartiger Gebiete vor, um sodann näher auf den Schutz noch nicht ausgewiesener, "potenzieller" Gebiete einzugehen. In diesem Zusammenhang legt MICHLER den Ablauf der Verträglichkeits- und Ausnahmeprüfung bei Straßenbauprojekten in diesen Gebieten näher dar und beschäftigt sich abschließend noch mit der Identifizierung und dem Schutz "faktischer" Vogelschutzgebiete, weil nach den Bestimmungen des Bundes-Naturschutzgesetzes die Vorschriften über die Verträglichkeits- und Ausnahmeprüfung auch auf Europäische Vogelschutzgebiete Anwendung finden. "Die Plan-Umweltprüfung bei der Verkehrswegeplanung" ist Gegenstand des Referats von Michael RONELLENFITSCH, das sich eingehend mit der Rechtsentwicklung der Umweltverträglichkeitsprüfungen und dem Anwendungsbereich der Plan-Umweltprüfungs-Richtlinie befasst. Dabei spricht sich der Referent nachdrücklich gegen die Einbeziehung des Bundesverkehrswegeplans und der Bedarfspläne, die als Anlagen zum Fernstraßenausbaugesetz und zum Bundesschienenwegeausbaugesetz ergehen, in die Pflicht zur Plan-Umweltprüfung aus, weil das von der europäischen Richtlinie vorgesehene Verfahren keine Grundlage für eine "Strategische Umweltprüfung" ist. In dem Referat von Michael JUPE über "Umsetzung der UVP-Richtlinie in Landesrecht am Beispiel des Brandenburgischen Straßengesetzes" wird ausführlich dargelegt, wie das europäische Richtlinienrecht zur Umweltverträglichkeitsprüfung, das auch die Bundesländer zur Aufnahme entsprechender Regelungen in das Landesrecht zwingt, in das Brandenburgische Straßengesetz " und inhaltsgleich in das Brandenburgische Gesetz über die Umweltverträglichkeitsprüfung " übernommen worden ist, indem durch eine Kombination von Schwellenwerten für Projektgrößen und Einzelfallprüfungen den europarechtlichen Vorgaben Rechnung getragen werden soll.
The Swedish National Road Administration (SNRA), the Japanese Automobile Research Institute (JARI) and the Federal Highway Research Institute (BASt) are co-operating in the International Harmonized Research Activities on Intelligent Transportation Systems (IHRA-ITS). Under this umbrella a joint study was conducted. The overall objective of this study was to contribute to the definition and validation of a "battery of tools" which enables a prediction and an assessment of changes in driver workload due to the use of in-vehicle information systems (IVIS) while driving. In this sense \"validation\" means to produce empirical evidence from which it can be concluded that these methods reliably discriminate between IVIS which differ in terms of relevant features of the HMI-design. Additionally these methods should also be sensitive to the task demands imposed on the driver by the traffic situation and their interactions with HMI-design. To achieve these goals experimental validation studies (on-road and in the simulator) were performed in Sweden, Germany and Japan. As a common element these studies focused on the secondary task methodology as an approach to the study of driver workload. In a joint German-Swedish on-road study the Peripheral Detection Task (PDT) was assessed with respect to its sensitivity to the complexity of traffic situations and effects of different types of navigation systems. Results show that the PDT performance of both the German and the Swedish subjects reflects the task demands of the traffic situations better than those of the IVIS. However, alternative explanations are possible which will be examined by further analyses. Results of this study are supplemented by the Japanese study where informational demands induced by various traffic situations were analysed by using a simple arithmetic task as a secondary task. Results of this study show that relatively large task demands can be expected even from simple traffic situations.
The development of tyre- and truck-manufacturers leads to the direction to introduce wide base single tyres (size 495/45R22,5) instead of twin tyres on the driving axle of trucks, tractors and busses. To study the driving behaviour and safety of various trucks and units with different tyre combinations and loading conditions was the aim of the study. A computer-aided simulation was used for this investigation. Drive tests with a 40 t unit with prototype single tyres on the drive axle were carried out to verify the simulation. Alterations in driving behaviour and driving safety are mainly dependent on the tyre cornering stiffness. The prototype wide single tyres had a higher lateral stiffness which leads to a higher degree of under-steering (safer driving behaviour). The altered spring base on the drive axle had no influence on the side- tilt stability of vehicle combinations but the solo truck profited from the higher rear axle roll stiffness (less danger for roll-over accidents). As far as the driving safety is concerned nothing speaks against wide base tyres on the drive axle. The simulation of a tyre defect in a bend (assuming 40% of the max. transferable side force for the flat tyre) showed no increased danger using wide single tyres. Later driving tests showed however the need of tyre run flat possibilities to avoid jack-knifing of road trains. Also tyre pressure monitoring systems and electronic stability programs for the trucks are advised.
The frontal crash is still an important contributor to deaths and serious injured resulting from road accidents in Europe. As the Hybrid-III dummy used in crash tests is over two decades old, the European Enhanced Vehicle-safety Committee is studying the potential for a new test device. Key is the availability of a well-defined set of requirements that identifies the minimum level of biofidelity required for an advanced frontal dummy. In this paper, a complete set of frontal impact biofidelity requirements, consisting of references , description of test conditions and corridors, is presented.
At the 2001 ESV-Conference the EEVC working group on compatibility (WG 15) reported the first phase of the research work to investigate the major factors influencing compatibility between passenger cars. Following this, WG15 performed an interim study, which was partly subventioned by the European Commission, the results of which are reported in this paper. In the next phase of work, it is intended to complete the development of a suite of test procedures and associated performance criteria to assess the compatibility of passenger cars in frontal impacts The main areas of work for the interim study were: - in depth accident data analysis - the development of methods to assess the potential benefit of improved compatibility - crash testing. The accident analysis identified the major compatibility problems to be poor structural interaction, stiffness mismatching and compartment strength. Different methods to assess the potential benefit of improved compatibility were applied to in depth accident data. Full scale crash testing including a car to car test was performed to help develop the following candidate compatibility test procedures: - a full width wall test with a deformable aluminium honeycomb face and a high resolution load cell wall - an offset barrier test with the EEVC barrier face and a high resolution load cell wall - an offset barrier test with the progressively deformable barrier (PDB) face. The results of the interim study will be presented in detail and the proposed methodology of the next phase to complete the development of a suite of test procedures for the assessment of car to car compatibility in frontal impacts will be outlined