Like a fashion mannequin, the dummy looks like a human, but its more-than-skin-deep beauties consist of high-tech instrumentation and a state-of-the-art physique. And like the ventriloquist's version, the crash test dummy can't speak except in a highly effective series of television commercials for seat belt safety.
Highway safety agencies around the world rely on the crash-worthiness test in which an automobile is rammed into a brick wall to observe damage and generate data about the car's performance. The occupants of the test vehicle are crash test dummies (properly called "Anthropomorphic Test Devices") that are fabricated to resemble and respond like human bodies and that are loaded with sophisticated instrumentation. The instruments record information on acceleration, speed, deceleration on impact, force of impact, and the various motions and deformations of each dummy's torso and limbs. These data are studied by safety engineers and related to behaviors of human occupants and their potential injuries.
The crash test method has major flaws despite its universal acceptance. The automobile (or other vehicle) is partially or fully damaged, depending on the test objective. The dummies can be retrofitted and reused many times, but their ability to respond with all the complexities of human bodies is always being perfected.
Prior to the late 1940s, automobiles were tested using cadavers. Injuries could be observed on real bodies, but cadavers did not respond like breathing, flexible beings. Crash test dummies were developed in 1949 under contract to the U.S. Air Force for testing aircraft ejection seats that were mounted on rocket-propelled sleds on rails. "Sierra Sam" was the first dummy. The automotive industry later used the same type of dummy to develop lap seat belts and shoulder harnesses. Sierra Sam resembled the average adult male with a statistically correct weight and articulated limbs; however, Sam's spine and neck were rigid. The acceleration of his head as it followed the path of ejection could be measured, but this was far from sufficient for evaluating potential head injuries.
By 1952, Mark 1 was manufactured from a plaster cast of a live man, and this dummy marked a huge improvement in the state of the art. His skull housed sensors for measuring acceleration and the force of impact, and it was cast from two pieces of aluminum. Mark l's spine consisted of a series of ball-and-socket joints with spacers to simulate the range of motion of a real backbone. The dummy also had a set of steel tubing ribs, vinyl skin, and foam flesh, but stiff limbs. Other dummies developed through 1956 were modified and instrumented to measure a selected range of motions. Dummies of sizes and weights other than average were made for the first time, and these post-Mark 1 dummies were used to test tractor safety, frogmen's suits for underwater escapes, and flight and safety aspects of space research for the National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA).
Space programs motivated the next advances in dummy design. To evaluate the effects of rocket thrust on astronauts strapped into the seats of space capsules, the American and European space programs funded the invention of the Grumman-Alderson Research Dummy (GARD). The seated astronaut had to be perfectly aligned with the direction of rocket thrust, or both the man and seat would twist out of place. GARD was an important technological step because the processes of locating the center of gravity and evaluating the moment of inertia (the tendency to rotate with acceleration) were well instrumented in this durable dummy. GARD is still used to test ejection seats because the seats restrict motion ranges in this mannequin keeping them simple enough for engineers to measure rotations, acceleration history, and the stresses between the man and the seat.
Until 1966, the aviation industry, military aeronautics, and the space program led the development of test dummies. The automotive industry became the driving force in developing crash test dummies that year as automobile fatalities emphasized the need for improvements in the dummy's rib cage, spine, pelvis, and abdominal cavity to evaluate restraint systems. Mathematical models and experiments with separate ranges of the body showed that motions could be simulated with spring connections. The springs move on impact, and they also rebound so effects like whiplash can be studied. Tests of lap safety belts concentrated on injuries to the pelvis, but development of the shoulder harness required the dummy to have a breastbone (sternum), clavicles, and shoulder blades. The harnessed dummy was equipped with an instrumented visceral sac that imitated the motions of internal organs. Instrumentation was also installed in cavities in the thighs, chest, and head so that more complicated movements and force deflections could be studied.
By 1970, it was apparent that the adult-sized, male dummy did not accurately represent the smaller proportions of children and females. In fact some injuries to the smaller physiques were being caused by belts and harnesses that were proven safe by the average dummy. A larger male model and the first female dummy were produced in 1970 and were named Sierra Stan and Sierra Susie. That same year, they added to their family with Sierra Sammy (a six-year-old) and Sierra Toddler (a three-year-old). Neither child was correct in weight distribution, but at least they were represented and studied for the first time.
The problem of evaluating injuries to children was complicated by the fact that many children are injured in automobile accidents because they are standing or not sitting conventionally during those accidents. The range of motions and potential impacts are, therefore, far more variable for unrestrained children. Redesign of the child dummies followed immediately, and modifications to child dummies continued to be the most intensely pursued area of crash test design from the 1970s through the 1990s. In the 1970s, improved data gave the children more flexible skeletons and more supple limb joints than adults, made them adaptable to various positions in the car, and improved instrumentation so the broader range of variables could be measured or interpreted. Development and testing of child safety seats, booster seats, and airbags necessitated special attention toward infant, toddler, and youngster dummies.
Improvements in computer analysis were also revolutionizing crash tests by the mid 1970s. Computer methods allowed measurement of almost forty different parameters in the behavior of test dummies. Construction materials were similarly improved to make realistic, fully articulated dummies possible. To replicate the behavior of human bones, the dummy's bones were manufactured of fiberglass with greater breaking strength so the dummy could be used again. These many adaptations led to more and more specialized dummies, however, so models like the Supermorphic Dummy were made exclusively for car crash tests—they were too fragile for ejection testing.
Specializations in aircraft testing dummies included the Limb Restraint Evaluator (LRE) Anthropomorphic Manikin, which was created especially for testing restraint devices to prevent injuries due to flailing during ejection from military jets. Other specialized dummies tested experimental parachutes, helicopter crashes, and racing cars. For example, tests of crashes involving race cars (of the type raced at the Indianapolis 500-Mile Race or on the Championship Auto Racing Team [CART] circuit) showed that the heavy racing helmets worn by the drivers do protect their heads from impact damage, but the helmet's weight increases the risk of neck injuries
Test dummy technology accelerated in development again with the design and testing of the airbag. The dummy family was diversified further to include still more body types. Fatalities from airbag deployment occurred most often among persons outside the statistical dimensions. These "small occupants out of position" or OOP occupants stimulated more evolutionary changes in the mannequins. Airbag deployment subjected the dummies to forces that exceeded their design capabilities. Significant upgrades to the dummy family had taken place by 1997 thanks to airbag testing and development of side impact airbags.
The body of the crash test dummy is made of metal parts consisting of aluminum, bronze, or steel (depending on design, purpose, and body parts) as well as metal plating materials. A wide variety of plastics are also incorporated in most designs, and the plastics include Delrin (a type of long-wearing acetate resin), urethane and polyurethane foam, and vinyl. Most dummies are clothed to simulate reality, and specific vendors supply clothing, paint, and adhesives for marking critical targets or measurement points on the dummies. In fact, not only are outside suppliers used for many dummy constituents, but the federal testing agencies that approve dummy designs dictate specific vendors that must be used for some materials.
Dummy manufacturers supply little or no instrumentation. Designs provide space for instrumentation to be secured, but instrumentation is so specific to actual testing conditions that the customers of the dummy builders install their own. Some small potentiometers are sometimes built into the manufacturer's lines, but more sophisticated instruments like accelerometers and load-measuring sensors are selected by the customer from their own instrument packages or specialized vendors.
The design of crash test dummies is an intricate and isolated process limited to government agencies, dummy manufacturers, and customers like automobile manufacturers. The dummy makers are not responsible for creating their own designs. Instead, they receive drawing packages, sets of construction specifications, and specifications for required testing from the National Traffic Safety Administration (NTSA). European agencies provide similar sets of documents to dummy manufacturers. Based on their experiences in building dummies, repairing or retrofitting them, and observing their post-accident traumas, manufacturers of dummies, as well as users, do have input into design changes. The NTSA bases its designs on a multitude of data including accident reports, location within a vehicle, variations in physique and physical development, autopsies, and simulations. Biomechanics experts analyze all the available data and create the specifications that are sent to the manufacturers.
The manufacture of crash test dummies is highly proprietary because of the complexities of design and the small number of qualified manufacturers in the world. All design and construction meets an extremely high set of standards there are no "B-grade" crash test dummies.
Quality control is rigidly specified by the NTSA (or other agencies) before manufacture is even considered. Dummy assemblers are well aware that their "family" will be sacrificed for the safety of thousands of members of the public, so they feel an intense responsibility toward quality issues. When parts of the body are complete and when the entire body and head are assembled, the dummy goes through a rigorous set of tests in the calibration laboratory, where required tests are performed and measurements are made to confirm that the product conforms to every detail of the design drawings and specifications. Tests include a head drop test, thorax (chest) impact
There are no byproducts from dummy manufacture. Waste is limited to metal and plastic that can be recycled.
Computer technologies have made the crash test dummy adaptable to the extremes of human activity through design improvements, testing methods, miniaturization of instruments, and data analysis. Ultimately, however, the computer may prove fatal to the dummy family. Computer simulations are becoming so sophisticated that they can represent car crashes, damages to the vehicle itself, and injuries to the occupants. Simulations are attractive to auto manufacturers because they eliminate some, if not all, destructive testing, which costs approximately $750,000 per test. Vehicle occupants can be examined after simulated impact, and the details of injuries to the head and spine especially can be analyzed. Up to three months of design time can be removed from the design-production schedule for a new car model, and new designs may be safer for a wider range of different-sized drivers and passengers.
Dummy manufacturers, on the other hand, insist their families are here to stay. More modifications and complexities as well as technological applications have made crash test dummies reliable barometers for vehicle performance. Government agencies recognize this and are asking manufacturers to produce dummies and sensors that focus on very specific injuries. In 1995, this focus turned to lower legs, movement of the feet, and damage to Achilles tendons caused by frontal impacts. New sensors made the legs of the Hybrid 350 (certified in 1997) resemble those of a bionic man. In 1999, emphasis shifted to rear impact collisions and to developing state of the art vertebrae through cooperative research among agencies, universities, and manufacturers. Interest is also growing in skin simulants that will bruise and abrade during accidents; data from these developments will also aid doctors in improving treatments for skin injuries. Like its human counterparts, the crash test dummy is continuing to evolve for the purpose of saving our lives and limbs.
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— Gillian S. Holmes
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