The FIA Institute and Toyota have combined technology and expertise to help improve safety in high speed racecar accidents.
Toyota has been
using a computer simulation system, called Total Human Model Safety
(THUMS), to help it design safer production vehicles for several years.
THUMS is a virtual representation of the human body that can provide
Toyota engineers with precise data about the injuries real people might
suffer in different kinds of vehicle accidents.
The FIA Institute
and Toyota have worked together to use the THUMS system to recreate
high speed accidents and their effects on human physiology, allowing
them to study the kind of serious injuries that are difficult to
measure with conventional crash test dummies. The results of the new
study are in the process of completion.
The FIA Institute
targeted this technology specifically to help study high speed rear
impact crashes in the FIA Formula One World Championship and Indy
Racing League (IRL). THUMS has proved very effective for analysis of
the complex interaction between the driver’s body and the car in a high
speed accident.
The FIA Institute
and Dr Terry Trammell, a fellow of the FIA Institute and consultant to
IRL, have provided data on accidents of this type and information on
racecar seat structures. These have been used by Toyota to create
virtual collisions using THUMS and simulated racecar seat designs
, which have succeeded in replicating spinal injuries from high speed rear impact collisions.
This co-operative
effort has led to a determination of the mechanism for spinal-stress
build-up – the result of a combination of G-forces and the specific
seating position used in F1 and IRL racecars. The research has prompted
consideration of what measures might be taken to reduce stress on the
spine during rear impact collisions.
The FIA Institute expects the research to lead to improved safety for F1, IRL and other single-seater racecar championships.
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