Slide 1 Graham Greene Chairman JAA Occupant Survivability Project Advisory Group
Slide 2 Anthropometric Research Study JAA Study Background Increasing body dimensions (eg 17mm UK male height increase ) plus increasing obesity concerns Longer duration flights Travelling population ageing
Slide 3 Regulatory impact Concerns expressed by airlines v concerns expressed by pax No explicit regulations with the exception of the UK Regulations need to be based on sound (scientific) advice together with cost- effectiveness studies
Slide 4 Study Terms of reference Comfort not an issue – very subjective Seating must be able to safely accommodate pax Other relevant matters – holistic approach
Slide 5 Contract Award Invitations in European Journal ICE Ergonomics, Loughborough UK Substantial experience in transport ergonomics Anthropometric studies background Nottingham University of Medicine
Slide 6 Study Methodology Questionnaire – check all issues covered Review of AN64 – only existing standard dimensions computer models for ergonomics Safety implications and health One year duration
Slide 7 Study Report Questionnaire – brief, 300 pax, long(22hrs) and short haul (4hrs) Ages up to 76 years, height to 6’6’’ Around 30% ‘experienced problems’ with seat spacing Confirmed importance of AN64 measurements and identified other issues
Slide 8 Study Report Expert appraisal by 3 ergonomists SAMMIE ergonomics design system (CAD) – developed over 25 years for seating arrangements Up-to date anthropometric data
Slide 9 Conclusions 1 Recommended that (AN64) Dimension A be increased from 26ins (660mm) to at least 28.2ins (711mm) to accommodate 95%ile European seated pax. Note that a 99%ile European male would need a space of 31.3 inches (795mm)
Slide 10 Conclusions 2 Substantial list of seating dimensions building on AN64 for consideration eg lower leg/foot space/clearance envelope. Explore value of ‘flip-up’ seat squabs
Slide 11 Conclusions 3 Support for comprehensive research on the effects of prolonged seating/ability to move. Egress trials to validate some recommendations Full report on JAA website
Slide 12 Way Forward Results to JAA Cabin Safety Steering Group for regulatory consideration Formation of a Working Group, Work plan approved by C-JAA
Slide 13 JAA Working Group Review spacing recommendations Implications of reduced mobility Accident implications Benefit to European flying population Regulatory impact assessment EASA responsibility
Slide 14 Review spacing recommendations Straightforward in principle – physical dimensions of populations Judgements – eg. 95 percentile? Value of other spacing definitions
Slide 15 Implications of Reduced Mobility Evacuation implications –very little published work How important is the issue compared with other evacuation issues? Pax health
Slide 16 Accident Implications Impact Brace position Upper torso restraint?