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Many manufacturers have ignored
vehicle crashworthiness, relying on inadequate government standards...
As part of a vehicle's structural
support system, a roof creates a "non-encroachment zone" or "survival space"
that should protect occupants in a crash. If a roof crushes substantially
in an accident, occupants may suffer disabling head or neck injuries.
Most vehicles do not have enough headroom to allow for more than three
to four inches of crush without significantly increasing the risk of serious
injury.
Rollovers are the most common
cause of roof crush. Over 10,000 people are fatally injured each
year in rollover crashes. The causal relationship between rollovers
and harm to occupants from roof crush has been recognized as early as 1932.
Nevertheless, the auto industry denies the relationship between roof crush
and occupant injuries.
Manufacturers insist that
the forces generated by the impact--not a lack of crashworthiness--cause
the injury or death. This argument does not take into account that
rollovers are among the most benign accidents because the vehicle decelerates
over a long distance. Arguing that rollovers are random events that
cannot be duplicated, manufacturers rarely conduct rollover tests to guide
their roof design or construction.


NHTSA's FMVSS 216, which
sets the minimum strength requirements for a vehicle's roof crush resistance,
does not require manufacturers to conduct dynamic rollover tests on roofs.
The federal standard also fails to consider what material the roof is made
of and how it is constructed. Consequently, this failure has led
to:
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roofs
that can shatter, crush, or separate from the vehicle, |
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poor
welding that can cause a steel roof to collapse, and |
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structural support that
may be defective in design and manufacture. |


In a rollover, a roof can
crush in a number of different ways depending on the construction of the
roof and the vehicle trajectory:

One of the most common types
of injury in a rollover roof crush case is a neck fracture caused by flexion
and shear forces produced when the roof crushes down on the occupant. Other types of neck injuries include axial neck compresion and hyperextension neck injuries. Brain injury can also occur by intrusion of the roof into the occupant space.

Neck Fracture Injury

Axial Neck Compresion Injury

Hyperextension Neck Injury
(06/07/00)
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