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Published byValerie Hodges Modified over 9 years ago
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The Vehicle Industry, Regulation and Safety Philip McKenzie Australia
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Agenda Overview Vehicle Safety Vehicle Industry Activities Driver Infrastructure Vehicle Emissions Regulation Other Influences Summary
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Ultimate Goal of Industry and Government No Injury or Death How to Achieve? – Research – Accident Analysis – Development – Testing – Application
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Working Together Decade of Action NTC ( National Transport Commission ) Research bodies Governments Industry Community
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Vehicle Safety
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Long History Haddon Matrix ( 1970 ) Basis of injury prevention Factors in crash sequence – pre crash, crash, post crash Inputs – human, vehicle/equipment, environment
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Precrash – Haddon matrix 1 ( Human ) Information, attitudes, impairment, enforcement 2( Vehicle ) Roadworthiness, lighting, braking, speed management 3( Environment ) Road design, speed limits, pedestrian facilities
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Crash – Haddon matrix 4( Human ) Use of restraints, impairments 5( Vehicle ) Occupant restraints, other safety devices, crash protection design 6Crash-protective roadside objects
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Post Crash – Haddon matrix 7( Human ) First aid skills, access to medics 8(Vehicle )Ease of access, fire risk 9( Environment ) Rescue facilities, congestion
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Basic responsibilities Human – Primary is government, secondary is vehicle manufacturers Vehicle/equipment – Primary is vehicle manufacturers, secondary is governments Environment – Primary is governments
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Vehicle Manufacturers Activities
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Vehicle Passive safety Energy absorbing body structure Occupant restraint Optimized body structures Seat belt P/T & F/L Side airbags Knee airbags etc…
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Direction of passive safety Injury – Severe/fatal Less severe Occupant - Adult male Various types of occupants, child, aged, small, large Configuration – Barrier Various types of impact, PED, rollover, under/over, pole, small overlap
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Active safety Vehicle stability Accident mitigation ABS ( Anti-lock ) Traction control Vehicle stability control Pre-crash Active safety has significant potential to reduce injuries
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Integration of Systems + Steering Cooperative control Braking & Driving Cooperative control VSC, ABS etc TodayTomorrow Safety Increased safety
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Technology Development Recognition – monitoring of surroundings Judgement – e.g. braking distance, use of logic Action – e.g. emergency braking assistance
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Pre Crash Safety Active safety system to avoid collision Monitoring technology to activate pre-crash technology, e.g. cameras, radar, suspension control, collision judging computer, pre-crash seat belts, whiplash mitigation Passive safety Injury reduction if accident occurs
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Safety Technology Direction
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Driver
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Least advanced Major cause Young people in low technology vehicles Education and training Law enforcement Challenge – use of engineering to negate inconsistencies
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Infrastructure
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Major developments and potential Interactive Intelligent Collision avoidance Separation, vehicle to vehicle and human Traffic Management, must link with Vehicle to vehicle Vehicle to driver to infrastructure Vehicle control – e.g. speed control, traffic management to reduce congestion and collision
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Vehicle Emissions
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Regulation driving technology Output driven – different technologies to achieve outcomes Industry goal – sustainable future
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Vehicle Emissions International approach National All impacting factors need consistent regulation, e.g. fuels Testing regime must match real world Incentive approach Infrastructure role in reducing congestion
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Regulation
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Australia Mature system in Australia, long history Harmonising with UN ADR/UN ECE flexibility National approach – sometimes a challenge International gtr ( global technical regulation ). Basis of regulation with local management
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Regulation – Challenges Regional protectiveness Regions developing at different rates One size fits all expensive National approach a must Regulation must not impede technology Must focus on outcomes, not particular technologies
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Regulation challenges continued Mutual recognition Opens markets to competition How to pick winners Speed of introduction of regulations e.g. harmonising regulations can be a slow process
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Regulation and the Vehicle Industry Minimum standards are required Vehicle development lead times are long Structure changes, i.e. PED are the longest Add on technologies – i.e. electronic are shorter but can have long lead time testing Harmonisation is a must or cost up significantly Mutual recognition a must or cost up Robust system for mutual recognition required
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Other Influences
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Other Major Influences NCAP – New Car Assessment Program Increasing influence in all areas Impacts faster than regulation – shorter lead times OH&S ( Occupational Health and Safety ) a major driving force in Australia Australasia NCAP positive approach through 5 year time frame
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Reflections on NCAP Large versus small car – false sense of security 4 star Vs 5 star Design to meet a test or real world Diversification rather than harmonisation Complexity in multi market environment Cost Vs Benefit for consumer Decision making process Pseudo regulation
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Summary
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Overall perspective Regulation or NCAP collaborative approach required New technology introduction driven by industry Safety/Environment major R&D focus How to regulate for the best & most beneficial technology Time frames must be realistic
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Summary continued Consult widely Research based advances Prove advantage Actual reduction in trauma Harmonisation Mutual recognition Steady progress – not everything at once Improve penetration of new technology – get rid of clunkers Do not price vehicles out of peoples reach – new cars with lower technology are better than old cars
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Thank you for your attention Any Questions Email philip@rpm2604.com
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