RE: PH Origins: Airbags

RE: PH Origins: Airbags

Wednesday 27th June 2018

PH Origins: Airbags

The convoluted tale behind the development and deployment of the life-saving airbag



In 1952, John Hetrick was out enjoying a Sunday drive with his daughter when - much to his dismay - he drove over a crest and found a boulder blocking the road ahead.

His instincts took over; he slammed on the brakes, swung the steering wheel of his Chrysler and threw the car off the road. Fortune smiled upon him, for the car simply ended up in a ditch and no one was any worse for wear.

Thoughts of what could have happened, however, continued to run through his mind. After all, cars of that era had nothing but hard, unyielding dashboards for occupants to hit - and if the car had come to a stop more forcefully, both he and his daughter could have been grievously injured.

Hetrick, who had previously served in the US Navy as an industrial engineer, set about designing what he would dub the 'safety cushion'. In the event of a crash, a motion-triggered valve would release compressed air from an accumulator. This air would rapidly inflate a cushion mounted ahead of the passenger or driver, protecting their upper bodies from hitting hard surfaces.

"It is well appreciated that many persons suffer death or serious injury when hurled against an unyielding structural portion of an automotive," wrote Hetrick. "My main object, in devising an inflatable cushion assembly for automotive vehicles, is to provide a means whereby death or injury can be prevented."


His first patent for this innovation was subsequently submitted and then granted in August 1953 - and, although Hetrick's design was unworkable at the time, the likes of General Motors, Eaton, TRW, Daihatsu and Skoda would all later reference Hetrick's design as airbags became a key safety feature.

Hetrick wasn't the only one who had come up with such a concept, though; German engineer Walter Linderer had conceived a very similar configuration and, although he had submitted his patent early in October 1951, it wasn't granted until November 1953. Linderer's airbag patent had provisions for the use of compressed air or an explosive charge - the latter would prove important in the future - as well as manual and automatic means of activation.

It would be some time before an airbag made it to the market, however, despite rapidly increasing public and governmental demand for improved vehicle safety. There were two key issues, the first of which was how to reliably trigger the inflation of the bags. The second problem was with generating enough pressure in the bag, quickly enough, for it to be of use; a system using compressed air was simply too slow to act.

Japanese engineer Yasuzaburou Kobori, who was studying automotive safety systems, suggested using an explosive to rapidly inflate the airbag in 1964. He also proposed the use of side, rear and roof airbags, triggered by sensors in the nose and tail of the car, along with a pedestrian airbag - which was designed specifically to stop a person's head impacting the bonnet of the car.

Alas, Japanese legislation meant that an explosive device couldn't be used in such an application, and the concept was taken no further. Kobori died in 1975, unfortunately, long before airbags made any meaningful mark.


Back in the US, running in parallel with Kobori's developments, engineer Allen Breed had stepped up to the plate to resolve the safe, reliable triggering issue. Breed ran a company that produced specialised safety, fusing and arming equipment for the US Military and had become fascinated with the concept of automotive airbags, seeing both great safety benefits and a huge market. After all, the devices Breed Corporation produced for preventing weapons detonating when dropped could easily be repurposed for automotive use.

Breed's brother, David Breed, held another piece of the puzzle - as he had come up with a simple series of time-delay triggers based on cylinders or spheres suspended in fluid-filled tubes, which he patented in the late 1960s during his time at MIT. These were slowly reworked, over the course of several years, into a series of electromechanical ball-in-tube sensors that could quickly and reliably trigger an airbag in the event of an accident. Breed marketed this concept, along with complete airbag systems, to Chrysler - which was interested enough to begin developing prototype airbags.

Inflating the bag quickly was still problematic, though, so Chrysler approached Talley Defense Systems for help in developing a better, quicker firing system. TDS, which had been around since the 1960s, specialised in designing solid propellant systems for ejection seats - so it had exactly the right kind of expertise required. John Pietz, a chemist working for the company, promptly developed a sodium azide-based propellant. It was an unfriendly concoction but, when safely stored in a container, could be triggered and would rapidly generate nitrogen to inflate an airbag.

Chrysler eventually lost interest in the project, partly because of the prohibitive cost of the overall system. However, as the volume of traffic on American roads continued to expand at an exponential rate - along with the number of accidents - American manufacturers began seeking ways to better restrain people during a crash. After all, seat belts were not required and few wore them - so an automatically deploying airbag would offer some protection and a form of restraint.

TDS, wanting to capitalise on its creation, then went to GM with its new sodium azide-inflated airbag concept. GM - and also Ford - subsequently caved as safety demands increased and began trialling airbags in the early 1970s. Then, in 1973, GM introduced the 'Air Cushion Restraint System' for full-size Cadillac, Oldsmobile and Buicks.


By 1974, airbags were offered for both front-seat occupants. The optional airbag system was dropped in 1976, though, as only some 10,000 customers ticked the box for this expensive new safety system - as prices range from around $180 to $300, which was more than the cost of an AM/FM radio.

As component costs fell and the concept became more widely understood and appreciated, airbags began to be deployed - figuratively and literally - in greater numbers throughout the 1980s. By 1989, it was mandatory to offer either seat belts or airbags in all new cars sold in America. Other innovations followed, such as less harmful non-azide propellants and systems that could vary the pressure in the bag depending on the speed of the collision.

The development of these innovative safety devices wasn't limited to the US and Japan, mind; Mercedes-Benz began experimenting with airbags in 1966 but didn't introduce a production system until 1981, in the W126-gen S-Class.

Breed had persisted with airbags throughout the lull in interest, too, and the payoff was huge; he established a standalone automotive safety company that, by 1995, was supplying 21 car companies with airbags and netting hundreds of millions of dollars in sales.

Fortunately, Hetrick lived to see this and more. He died in 1999, long after the widespread adoption of airbags - and a year after US regulations were revised to make twin front airbags mandatory. Soon, they were an integral part of every manufacturers' safety equipment line-up.

Author
Discussion

Onehp

Original Poster:

1,617 posts

283 months

Wednesday 27th June 2018
quotequote all
Intresting. I had expected some input from the safety minded Swedes, but I suppose Autoliv only came into the picture later on...

Lewis Kingston

240 posts

77 months

Wednesday 27th June 2018
quotequote all
Onehp said:
Intresting. I had expected some input from the safety minded Swedes
Indeed. Volvo didn't start fitting airbags until '87 and Saab wasn't far behind, fitting them to the 9000 in '88 (I think).

anonymous-user

54 months

Wednesday 27th June 2018
quotequote all
Of course the most "fun" bit of airbag and their development and testing is the bit where you need to ensure they don't go off when NOT wanted:

secondhand vw one careful owner


;-)

ElectricPics

761 posts

81 months

Wednesday 27th June 2018
quotequote all
A mention must go to Audi's alternative Procon-10 that used cables to pull the steering column away from the driver and tension the seatbelts in the event of a frontal collision. Unfortunately any car that might have been repairable was destroyed by this system.

richs2891

897 posts

253 months

Wednesday 27th June 2018
quotequote all
Max_Torque said:
Of course the most "fun" bit of airbag and their development and testing is the bit where you need to ensure they don't go off when NOT wanted:

secondhand vw one careful owner


;-)
Thats the bit that fascinates me the most - how air bags work successfully with off roaders.

xjay1337

15,966 posts

118 months

Wednesday 27th June 2018
quotequote all
Airbags are probably the best invention to hit the automotive market, other than seatbelts.


unpc

2,835 posts

213 months

Wednesday 27th June 2018
quotequote all
ElectricPics said:
A mention must go to Audi's alternative Procon-10 that used cables to pull the steering column away from the driver and tension the seatbelts in the event of a frontal collision. Unfortunately any car that might have been repairable was destroyed by this system.
Nobody else used that system as far as I know so it must have been either a) not that effective or b) prohibitively expensive to either produce or license. My guess is a.

Triumph Man

8,690 posts

168 months

Wednesday 27th June 2018
quotequote all
ElectricPics said:
A mention must go to Audi's alternative Procon-10 that used cables to pull the steering column away from the driver and tension the seatbelts in the event of a frontal collision. Unfortunately any car that might have been repairable was destroyed by this system.
Funnily enough this was the first thing I thought of when I looked at this thread. Surely if the impact is enough to "deploy" the Procon-ten system, then the car would be irreparable anyway? It works by the engine and gearbox being shoved back and pulling the steel cables, which if that has happened it won't be a case of breaking out the T-cut...

anonymous-user

54 months

Wednesday 27th June 2018
quotequote all
richs2891 said:
Max_Torque said:
Of course the most "fun" bit of airbag and their development and testing is the bit where you need to ensure they don't go off when NOT wanted:

secondhand vw one careful owner


;-)
Thats the bit that fascinates me the most - how air bags work successfully with off roaders.
The simple answer is that the acceleration profile in a real crash is many times higher than for any off road impact! The trigger sensors are mounted right out at the extremes of the vehicle, on the front cross member or the door skins (for side airbags). In a collision, those parts experience massive decellerations, in the order of 50 to 100g, far far higher than any input from the road surface.

You'll note that the testing video i linked includes bits of the car getting hit by sledgehammers, and this is to simulate local strikes that don't actually require the airbags to fire. Also, lots of testing is done on rough and rocky surfaces, to ensure that flying debris doesn't trigger the systems accidentally.

Considering how many airbag systems are out there, the reliability is incredible really. Whilst i'm sure that somewhere, sometime, an airbag must have been accidentally triggered (ie in an accident), but i've never actually seen or heard any first hand accounts of this happening?

anonymous-user

54 months

Wednesday 27th June 2018
quotequote all
unpc said:
ElectricPics said:
A mention must go to Audi's alternative Procon-10 that used cables to pull the steering column away from the driver and tension the seatbelts in the event of a frontal collision. Unfortunately any car that might have been repairable was destroyed by this system.
Nobody else used that system as far as I know so it must have been either a) not that effective or b) prohibitively expensive to either produce or license. My guess is a.
It was effectively made obsolete by two things:

1) computer design and simulation advancing to such a point as to the net effect (a steering column that is pulled away from the driver) can be achieved by the basic structure of the system (ie the subframe, steering rack, steering column and links being geometrically aligned, restrained and trajectory controlled to prevent the column protruding into the cabin)

but more importantly

2) By the near universal adoption of handwheel mounted airbags themselves, which need a fixed location from which to fire, as the timing and inflation profile are critical to catch the driver properly (so their head doesn't roll sideways off the bag etc). For this, the steering column must maintain a fixed relationship to the seat during the impact.

xjay1337

15,966 posts

118 months

Wednesday 27th June 2018
quotequote all
Max_Torque said:
Considering how many airbag systems are out there, the reliability is incredible really. Whilst i'm sure that somewhere, sometime, an airbag must have been accidentally triggered (ie in an accident), but i've never actually seen or heard any first hand accounts of this happening?
On Top Gear in that cheap Wagon challenge :-)

And I remember hearing about the roll-hoops on the older SL55s would pop up when you gave it some.

Very true though - the general reliability of the systems is great. Then again, they are pretty simple sensor based systems.

anonymous-user

54 months

Wednesday 27th June 2018
quotequote all
Max_Torque said:
Of course the most "fun" bit of airbag and their development and testing is the bit where you need to ensure they don't go off when NOT wanted:

secondhand vw one careful owner


;-)
I think I've found a new job for my ex wife. That looked just like her driving to the shops; she even shuts the doors with the same care and attention as the bloke in the video.

gary71

1,967 posts

179 months

Wednesday 27th June 2018
quotequote all
Good article about my day job! smile


StevenRugg

181 posts

119 months

Wednesday 27th June 2018
quotequote all
Here's a great video demonstrating how fast they actually are at inflating! https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KRcajZHc6Yk&t=...

RemarkLima

2,374 posts

212 months

Thursday 28th June 2018
quotequote all
Max_Torque said:
Of course the most "fun" bit of airbag and their development and testing is the bit where you need to ensure they don't go off when NOT wanted:

secondhand vw one careful owner


;-)
That surely has to be the best thing to do to a VW Beetle - shame there wasn't more of them being punished!

anonymous-user

54 months

Thursday 28th June 2018
quotequote all
RemarkLima said:
Max_Torque said:
Of course the most "fun" bit of airbag and their development and testing is the bit where you need to ensure they don't go off when NOT wanted:

secondhand vw one careful owner


;-)
That surely has to be the best thing to do to a VW Beetle - shame there wasn't more of them being punished!
Whilst i think all beetles should be crushed, you still can't help but feel a moments "ouch" when that one does the "locked up, on full lock into the angled kerb" test.........

BigBen

11,640 posts

230 months

Thursday 28th June 2018
quotequote all
xjay1337 said:
And I remember hearing about the roll-hoops on the older SL55s would pop up when you gave it some.
They do. And on older Merc convertibles with a back seat they came with a warning not to have rear passengers unless the roll bar had been manually raised, lest they came up by 'surprise'.

OverSteery

3,610 posts

231 months

Thursday 28th June 2018
quotequote all
xjay1337 said:
Airbags are probably the best invention to hit the automotive market, other than seatbelts.
I hope you mean safety invention.