MHarryE
Elite Member
- Joined
- Feb 15, 2009
- Messages
- 2,970
- Location
- Northeastern Minnesota
- Tractor
- Kubota M7-171, M5-111, SVL75-2, RTV900XT & GR2120; CaseIH 1680 combine
Many years ago Mercedes had a pop-up roll bar on their convertibles. Sensors and a computer predicted an impending rollover and I believe it flipped into place in 0.3 seconds. Not sure if they still do that. But having attended at least one ROPS test, I remember the testing company placing something calle a - if I remember correctly - a displacement limiting volume - in the operator position. Through the various loadings nothing could intrude on this volume, simulating an operator. I believe the test manager said this represented a 90th percentile operator. So if you are the 50th percentile operator you have a pretty good margin of safety. But in an accident a person moves more than one might expect. I was once in severe turbulence where after things settled down a very concerned flight attendant who had been sitting behind me asked me if I hurt my head or neck when I hit the overhead. I had my belt tightened as tight as I could, and I am about the 50th percentile person, yet the belt and my body stretched out so much in the turbulence it appeared I hit the overhead which was a long way from my head when I was seated. The plane was a lightly loaded (4 passengers in a 50 passenger plane) turboprop and the turbulence was enough to empty most of the seat pockets of their magazines so it was a good jolt, well over 1G, but probably less than in a rollover.