https://www.bloomberg.com/news/features/2018-10-25/even-the-crash-test-dummies-are-putting-on-weight
Crash-Test Dummies Are Getting Fatter Because We Are, Too
October 25, 2018  Bryan Gruley

[image  
https://assets.bwbx.io/images/users/iqjWHBFdfxIU/iE7KbwGggqEM/v1/600x-1.jpg
An “obese” dummy enjoys a moment of repose at Humanetics
Photographer: Lyndon French for Bloomberg Businessweek
]

The economics of one strange corner of the automotive safety industry.

At first glance, Humanetics Innovative Solutions Inc. looks like it has a
pretty sweet business model. The suburban Detroit company is the world’s
largest maker of crash-test dummies, the steel-and-vinyl humanoids stuffed
with electronics that gauge how a car crash could injure a human body. The
company enjoys a global market share exceeding 70 percent, and its dummies
can cost as much as $1 million apiece. Regulators in the U.S. and other
countries effectively require Humanetics customers to buy at least some of
its products.

With a setup like that, you might say, even a dummy could make a fortune.
This makes Humanetics Chief Executive Officer Christopher O’Connor laugh,
though for a different reason than you might think. He’d much rather discuss
the implications of 3D printers and driverless cars than how Humanetics, or
any dummy maker, turns a profit. “I’ve said to myself, if I had $10 million,
I wouldn’t invest in this business,” O’Connor says. “I love it, but the
reality is, you’re not going to make a ton of money. The margins are always
going to be tight.”

The business of making and selling crash dummies is odd, and not only
because it involves faceless mannequins acting as proxies for the mangled
and the dead. Dummy makers spend years and millions of dollars developing
products that customers profess to admire but decline to buy. Vehicles and
drivers have changed dramatically, but the model of dummy used in many
government-required crash tests has been around for four decades. The
industry sells a mere 200 to 250 dummies in a decent year and generated $111
million in revenue globally in 2016, according to market-research company
Technavio.

At the Humanetics headquarters in Farmington Hills, Mich., and its factory
in Huron, Ohio, cubicles and worktables are littered with flesh-colored
dummy heads, feet, and hands, and parts carts hold shiny aluminum elbows,
knees, and clavicles. They’ll be assembled by some of Humanetics’ 750
employees into anthropomorphic devices of various genders and ages.
Information gleaned from dummies has helped automakers develop air bags,
advanced seat belts, penetration-resistant glass, and energy-absorbing
frames. Dummy performance in crash tests is central to the popular vehicle
safety rating, which influences sales. Given all this, it seems like
Humanetics’ continual improvement of its product ought to produce robust
growth. The problem is that dummies, unlike humans, don’t die, though a
decade ago the industry almost did.

In Volvo Car Group’s cavernous crash facility in Gothenburg, Sweden, eight
banks of 4,000-watt lamps shine on a V60 station wagon as technicians scurry
about making final preparations for a side-impact crash test. A bank of
electronic measuring equipment rests on the hood. Two dummies wait, one in
the front seat, the other directly behind.

The techs disperse. The garage is silent but for a voice on an intercom
counting down from 10. At zero, a flat barrier accelerates toward the car at
31 mph and T-bones it. The scene is placid one second and then suddenly,
jarringly violent—as in a real collision.

Then the serious work begins, much of it involving the collection and
analysis of data from the sensors inside the dummies: Did a rib deflect far
enough that it could have fractured? Might the intrusion of the driver’s
door have punctured an internal organ? Volvo runs as many as 10 full-scale
crash tests a week, including head-on collisions, lateral and angular
impacts, and outdoor tests in which vehicles are run into a roadside ditch
to see how the bodies—that is, the dummies’ bodies—are tossed around inside.

The company owns about 100 dummies, some brand-new, some as old as 40. A
number of Volvo’s Humanetics dummies represent a 5-foot-9-inch, 172-pound
male, which at one point was a statistically average man. (Said man is now
pushing 200.) Volvo also has dummies that stand in for larger men, small
women, and children of various ages. Then there’s a replica moose—collisions
with Bullwinkle are common in Sweden—that resembles an oil drum tipped
sideways and propped on four stilts.

Some of the early crash dummies, in the mid-20th century, were human
cadavers flung down elevator shafts and hogs impaled on steering columns.
There were live humans, too. In 1954, U.S. Air Force Colonel John Stapp, a
physician studying how deceleration affected military pilots in crashes,
rode a rocket sled at 632 mph on a New Mexico test track. He didn’t hit
anything, but blood filled his eyes as vessels burst under the pressure. His
research caught the attention of automakers; later he founded the annual
Stapp Car Crash Conference, which still contributes to crash-test
development.

The U.S. highway fatality rate in the 1950s ranged from 5 to 7 deaths per 1
million miles traveled. Autos were built with stiff exteriors that
transferred the deadly energy of a collision to their occupants. Interiors
were loaded with sharp doorknobs, radio buttons, rearview mirrors, and other
dangerous protrusions. Ralph Nader’s Unsafe at Any Speed, published in 1965,
changed that, becoming a best-seller and cultural force. In 1966, Congress
enacted the National Traffic and Motor Vehicle Safety Act, establishing
vehicle safety standards. In response, General Motors Co. developed the
first widely accepted crash dummy by combining parts from models made by two
other companies. That was the Hybrid I. By the late 1970s, the Hybrid III
was established as the standard for a front-end crash test.

[image]  O’Connor

In the mid-1980s, the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration started
using costumed dummies dubbed Vince and Larry in a goofy ad campaign that
encouraged Americans to buckle up. “You could learn a lot from a dummy,”
went the tag line. One TV commercial starred the pair in a fictional game
show called You Lost Your Life, in which they warned that if you don’t
secure your seat belt, “You could end up in places you never dreamed—like
traction!”

O’Connor, a retired U.S. Army colonel and former General Electric Co.
executive with a background in electrical and mechanical engineering, became
CEO of dummy manufacturer First Technology Safety Systems on the cusp of the
2008 financial crisis. “Our customers essentially stopped spending money,”
he says. A few smaller dummy makers went out of business. First Technology
merged with a rival, Robert A. Denton Inc., and the combined company was
named Humanetics. (It’s now owned by the private equity firm Bridgepoint.)
As CEO of the new company, O’Connor laid off about 50 employees and ordered
a push into emerging markets and nonauto businesses such as aerospace, where
dummies are used to test military parachutes and ejection seats, among other
things. He also cranked up the development of new products. In December
2015, NHTSA (pronounced “nitsa”) announced it would seek input on
incorporating new dummy models into crash tests that underlie the agency’s
vehicle crashworthiness ratings. It looked like a nice break for Humanetics.

The crash-test dummy sits in a wheelchair, dressed in a dull yellow jacket
with its hands folded in its lap. No, it didn’t survive an especially nasty
crash. “A wheelchair is just the easiest way to move it around,” says Mike
Beebe, chief technology officer of Humanetics and an engineer who’s been
working with crash dummies for 38 years.

Beebe is showing off the prototype at a safety conference in downtown
Detroit. It’s designed to represent a 70-year-old woman who’s 5 feet 3
inches tall and weighs 161 pounds. Those measurements were derived from
population data, cadaver testing, and body scans of people injured in car
crashes.

The dummy has a black plastic 3D-printed rib cage that looks like something
Ben Affleck might have worn as Batman. Beebe peels the yellow jacket down to
the waist to reveal a fabricated paunch meant to approximate an elderly
person’s girth and plastic replicas of a liver and a spleen.

“I could definitely see a need for an elderly dummy in the future”

There are good reasons to use dummies like this. Millions more elderly
drivers are on the road now that the baby-boom generation has entered its
70s. They tend to have bigger waists and additional thigh fat, which can
allow a seat belt to slide above the pelvis to the soft tissue covering
organs. To create a dummy that addresses those issues, Humanetics has spent
six years and more than $2 million. “This is our halo dummy, our Corvette,”
Beebe says, gesturing to the grandma stand-in. But the company has yet to
sell a single one. “We’ve seen some car companies say, ‘We like it,’ but
nobody has said, ‘We want to buy one,’?” O’Connor says.

The measurements required for government safety certifications effectively
demand that all companies use matching dummies for the same tests so that
results are consistent. NHTSA and the industry-funded Insurance Institute
for Highway Safety also issue periodic safety ratings for individual vehicle
models. The grades are based on tests conducted by NHTSA and IIHS, so
automakers would be foolish not to use the same dummies. Car companies
sometimes order customized models for particular tests they devise on their
own, but regulators and the institute have outsize influence on dummy-buying
decisions.

European regulators have indicated interest in the elderly Humanetics dummy,
which could eventually spur sales. Becky Mueller, a senior research engineer
for the insurance institute, says, “I could definitely see a need for an
elderly dummy in the future. But we don’t yet have the data to make that
decision. We’re still pretty far away.”

[image]  A Humanetics employee removes a face mold at the plant in Huron,
Ohio.

Sitting side by side in a high-ceilinged lab at the Humanetics headquarters
are two other dummies that represent the past and potential future of the
business. One is a modern Hybrid III, priced at $250,000 to $500,000, the
other a male THOR—a “test device for human occupant restraint”—that sells
for $500,000 to $1 million, depending on the number and sophistication of
the sensors installed.

If the elderly dummy is Humanetics’ Corvette, the THOR is its Tesla. It can
be fitted with sensors that offer as many as 150 “channels,” or repositories
of data, up to four times as many as in the other dummy. These sensors
supply minute details on such things as the distance a single rib travels on
impact and how a glancing blow to the side of the head might contribute to a
concussion.

The THOR is also Humanetics’ most biofidelic dummy, meaning it more
accurately imitates human responses. For instance, the spine and neck are
more flexible than those in older models. Jim Davis, vice president for
engineering, shows why this could matter in a head-on collision. The older
dummy “is very rigid and tends to move forward,” he says, “whereas a human
being tends to turn toward the A pillar,” the stanchion between the
windshield and the driver’s side window. “And look at the complexity of the
shoulder joints,” he says. “It’s important that it can capture this motion,”
he says, leaning one way and rolling his shoulders forward.

Humanetics has spent $10 million creating THOR. The company has developed a
distinct female version, partly because of a 2011 University of Virginia
study showing that women were 47 percent more likely than men to suffer
severe injuries in a crash. NHTSA has bought three female THORs, and
automakers have ordered five more, but it’s not yet clear how widely they’ll
be used. After NHTSA said in December 2015 that it wanted to revamp its car
safety ratings for the 2019 model year, sales of male THORs jumped.
Humanetics sold 58 in 2016, up from 19 the previous year. Then, shortly
before Donald Trump took office in January 2017, NHTSA restarted the
process, pushing back changes for at least a year.

Auto companies and the insurance institute have also urged NHTSA to exercise
caution. Manufacturers told the agency that the use of new tests and THOR
dummies could pose a “significant cost burden” that “would increase the
price of new vehicles.” The insurance institute told the agency it isn’t
clear yet that the new dummies, though technologically better, would enhance
information about crashworthiness.

[image]  The face mold.

Still, there are potential opportunities for Humanetics, including
driverless vehicles. Prospective car designs envision passengers facing
backward, sitting around tables, and reclining. There are no crash-test
specifications and no specific rules that apply to these configurations.
Manufacturers have just begun to grapple with what an autonomous car’s test
dummy might look like.

All of this should be good for Humanetics, despite O’Connor’s recent
frustrations. At the same time, other companies that make sensors and
related gear have been jumping into dummy-making. The capital investment
required to enter the business can be substantial, but NHTSA shares
specifications widely so regulators, auto companies, dummy makers, and
suppliers are all in sync.

Humanetics expects to sell about 50 THORs this year, fueled mostly by
European regulators pushing ahead with new crash-test programs. Meanwhile,
the U.S. fatality rate, which dipped to a record low of 1.08 per million
miles traveled in 2014 (32,744 deaths), was 1.16 last year (37,133). “The
administration has been dragging their feet on this,” O’Connor says. “Europe
and other countries have really been more proactive than the United States.
There’s a significant opportunity to save more lives.” And sell more
dummies.
[© bloomberg.com]




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