Volvo launches world's first seatbelt that adapts to every body in real time

midian182

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Why it matters: Automaker Volvo has long had a reputation for building vehicles with a focus on safety. It is now continuing that trend with the release of what it calls the multi-adaptive safety belt, which uses real-time data from interior and exterior sensors to alter a belt's protection settings.

The new seat belts can take into account factors such as the wearer's height, weight, body shape and seating position, along with the direction and speed of the vehicle. This information is sent to the seatbelt "in the blink of an eye" so its safety profile can be adapted to the individual, applying the optimal amount of force.

Volvo gave the example of a larger occupant receiving a higher belt load setting to reduce the risk of head injury in the event of a severe crash. If the crash is less severe, those with smaller frames will receive lower belt load settings to prevent rib injuries.

Seatbelts use load limiters to minimize belt-inflicted injury. These release a little more excess belt webbing when a great deal of force is applied to the belt. Volvo said that its new seat belts expand the load-limiting profiles from three to 11, thereby allowing better protection optimization for wearers.

Volvo, which invented the traditional three-point safety belt almost 70 years ago, developed the new design using information from five decades of safety research and from a database of over 80,000 people involved in real-life accidents.

The Swedish giant also explained that its system is able to improve over time as the company gathers more data and pushes out over-the-air software updates to vehicles that use the new seatbelts.

"The world first multi-adaptive safety belt is another milestone for automotive safety and a great example of how we leverage real-time data with the ambition to help save millions of more lives," said Åsa Haglund, head of Volvo Cars Safety Centre. "This marks a major upgrade to the modern three-point safety belt, a Volvo invention introduced in 1959, estimated to have saved over a million lives."

Unlike its original seatbelt design, expect Volvo to keep its multi-adaptive safety belt design to itself, though other manufacturers will probably come up with their own versions. The technology will debut in the the all-electric Volvo EX60 midsize SUV that is scheduled to launch next year.

Volvo has introduced a range of advanced safety features in recent years, including a 112 mph speed cap on all vehicles, driver alert systems, interior radar for detecting vulnerable occupants, and door-opening alerts that warn of approaching cyclists, pedestrians, or vehicles.

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Yea, It will be good for a commercial talking point with a family being saved from certain death due to a man's careless driving
 
What happens when the software fails as software does and the seatbelt decides to diagonally bisect your torso while you're waiting for a traffic light to change?
 
What happens when the software fails as software does and the seatbelt decides to diagonally bisect your torso while you're waiting for a traffic light to change?

Considering Volvo's track record, I would be inclined to trust that they did their research properly, again. And if there is an issue that they have to fix, they saved so many millions of lives by giving away their original seatbelt design, that no matter what happens they are still in the black (ok that last one could be pretty cynical if something bad does happen, so ignore it when it becomes unpalatable)
 
So it was ok for the OP to say its "man's careless driving" instead of "peoples careless driving"

double standards?

whataboutism much?

"man" gets used as a all-around term to mean "everyone" all the time, so most people would read it that way. No way that unrepeatable quote could be taken as anything other than what it was meant to be.

Apart from it being wrong, as statistics show that the most dangerous drivers on the road are young men (https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0022437517307600), the term itself is not about finding a potential issue with a defined group and maybe even finding a way to make it safer for them (e.g. actually designing car safety for everyone instead of just male caucasians). Saying something like that is only about denigration and that poor writer's own sense of deficiency.

Grow up and act like a civilized human being.
 
Yeah, software driven...and a bunch more hardware in the car to add to the already insane price of
vehicles and their repair costs.
 
Yeah, software driven...and a bunch more hardware in the car to add to the already insane price of
vehicles and their repair costs.

True (factoring inflation its around 2x the price compared to 1950), but then vehicle-linked fatalities have dropped dramatically since the introduction of safety measures and regulations, and continue to go down. Weirdly everywhere except the US... 🤔

My solution is to bike the 10k to work every day. Saves the price of the car, insurance, gas, inspection and repairs. I get my daily exercise and every pedal rotation saves me a couple bucks 😄
 
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