Hyundai Interseat Airbag Reduces Head Injuries 80%

AutoInformed.com

The sound of the deployment of an interseat airbag is about that of a 12-gauge shotgun.

Hyundai says that it has completed the development of an interseat airbag, aka center airbag, which reduces head injuries to passengers by more than 80% during a lateral collision. An interseat airbag protects passengers on the opposite side of the contact point.

General Motors introduced the industry’s first front center airbag, aka interseat, on the Buick Enclave, GMC Acadia, and Chevrolet Traverse mid-size crossovers during the 2013 model year.

AutoInformed.com

The GM front center air bag explodes from the right side of the driver’s seat and then positions itself between the front row seats near the center of the vehicle.

In case of a lateral collision, the passenger can be protected by the curtain airbag or the side airbag, but the person next to him or her may sustain a critical injury their head against the other passenger’s shoulder or head. As these kinds of cases have been reported, the European automotive safety evaluation program, aka Euro NCAP, said in 2014 that it strongly recommends interseat airbags.

Hyundai is about to complete the development of technology for a so-called dual mode for the collision between the driver and the passenger, and a single mode for the lateral collision when the driver is alone in the car. Even though the driver may be alone in the car, if there is a strong enough collision from the right-hand side, the driver will be thrown towards the passenger’s seat due to inertia. The driver’s head can hit the thrusting contact surface in some cases.

Because of this safety problem, Euro NCAP is considering collision safety evaluations from 2020 that measure single mode forces. Unlike competitors who respond to the single and dual mode with respective airbags, Hyundai is planning to integrate the two modes with one module and differentiate itself from global.

Head Injury Criteria

For example, when a large 1,350kg car collides into the driver’s side at a speed of 50km/h, the Head Injury Criterion (HIC) for the head of the passenger far from the contact point is 1,700~1900, two or three times greater than the HIC of the driver, which is 600~800. HIC 1,000, a Euro safety standard, corresponds to a serious injury, such as the fracture of the skull.

Hyundai claims its interseat airbag reduces the HIC sustained by the head of the passenger in the same situation by more than 80% to ~HIC 300. As the inter-seat airbag installed to the right of the driver’s seat is deployed, the head of the passenger contacts the airbag cushion, not the driver’s shoulder, and the passenger receives an impact that will cause only a light abrasion. This is much lower than HIC 500, Euro NCAP’s top safety level.

About Ken Zino

Ken Zino, publisher (kzhw@aol.com), is a versatile auto industry participant with global experience spanning decades in print and broadcast journalism, as well as social media. He has automobile testing, marketing, public relations and communications experience. He is past president of The International Motor Press Assn, the Detroit Press Club, founding member and first President of the Automotive Press Assn. He is a member of APA, IMPA and the Midwest Automotive Press Assn. Zino is at home on test tracks, knows his way around U.S. Congressional hearing rooms, auto company headquarters, plant floors, as well as industry research and development labs where the real mobility work is done. He can quote from court decisions, refer to instrumented road tests, analyze financial results, and profile executive personalities and corporate cultures. He also brings an historical perspective while citing their contemporary relevance of the work of legendary auto writers such as Ken Purdy, Jim Dunne or Jerry Flint, or writers such as Red Smith, Mark Twain, Thomas Jefferson – all to bring perspective to a chaotic automotive universe. Above all, decades after he first drove a car, Zino still revels in the sound of the exhaust as the throttle is blipped and the driver’s rush that occurs when the entry, apex and exit points of a turn are smoothly and swiftly crossed. It’s the beginning of a perfect lap. AutoInformed has an editorial philosophy that loves transportation machines of all kinds while promoting critical thinking about the future use of cars and trucks. Zino builds AutoInformed from his background in automotive journalism starting at Hearst Publishing in New York City on Motor and MotorTech Magazines and car testing where he reviewed hundreds of vehicles in his decade-long stint as the Detroit Bureau Chief of Road & Track magazine. Zino has also worked in Europe, and Asia – now the largest automotive market in the world with China at its center.
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