Subject: big bro under the hood


                    Black Boxes Come
                    Down to Earth
                    Once Only for Plane Crashes, Devices Now
                    on Cars, Trains, Buses 

                    March 16, 2000 

                    By Ann Ferrar 

                                  DETROIT (APBnews.com)
                                  -- They are the elusive
                                  objects investigators seek
                                  after an airplane crashes. 

                                  Black boxes tell the hidden
                                  story: what was going on,
                                  what the pilot was doing
                                  and what condition the
                                  airplane was in before the
                                  accident. And now they are
                                  finding their way into cars. 

                                  The technical name for the
                                  devices is event data
                                  retrieval units (EDRUs).
                                  They work continuously, but
                    only save in memory the data recorded in the
                    last five seconds before a crash. At impact,
                    the device also records what researchers call
                    delta-v, the velocity of the crash itself. (A
                    crash into a brick wall, for example, at 20
                    mph, would have a delta-v of 20). 

                    What EDRUs do is yield critical information
                    about crashes, especially when there are no
                    bystanders available. "This is the only
                    unbiased eyewitness available," said John
                    Hinch, a research engineer at the National
                    Highway Transportation Safety Administration
                    (NHTSA). 

                    According to the NHTSA, there are 6,335,000
                    severe car crashes a year, or 17,350 a day, in
                    the United States. 

                    "Cars are designed in labs and tested with
                    certain benchmarks against walls, curbs and
                    potholes," Hinch said. "But in the real world ...
                    we really don't know how a car will behave in
                    every situation. The devices provide us with
                    real-life data that will help manufacturers
                    develop better crash sensor technology." 

                    The data also can help police and insurance
                    companies figure out what happened, Hinch
                    said. 

                    Latest models have them 

                    General Motors Corp. (GM) and Ford both
                    have begun installing black boxes in their
                    latest models. Since 1999, EDRUs have been
                    put in the airbag sensor systems of nine of
                    GM's model lines to record pre-crash vehicle
                    speed, engine rpm, whether or not the driver
                    applied the brake and how much foot pressure
                    was applied on the gas pedal. 

                    The black boxes are put under the driver or
                    passenger seat or under the dashboard and
                    have been built into the Pontiac Firebird;
                    Chevy Camaro and Corvette; Buick Park
                    Avenue, Regal and Century; and Cadillac
                    SeVille, El Dorado, and DeVille. 

                    The latest EDRUs are the
                    third generation of a
                    device first installed by
                    GM in the late 1980s. The
                    early version recorded
                    whether the driver had his
                    seatbelt on and how much
                    time elapsed between
                    impact and airbag
                    deployment. The second
                    version, introduced on
                    some cars in 1994, also
                    recorded the velocity of
                    the crash. 

                    Secrecy limits data 

                    Ford has installed what it calls a Personal
                    Safety System, a limited version of the EDRU,
                    on its Taurus and Mercury Sable model lines.
                    Ford's system uses sensors to analyze certain
                    crash conditions and automatically deploy the
                    most suitable safety devices for the situation,
                    including dual-stage airbags for the driver and
                    front-seat passenger. 

                    GM, however, is the first manufacturer to
                    make the data accessible to consumers. This
                    spring, a tool will be introduced that will
                    enable consumers to retrieve the data
                    themselves and download it onto a computer.
                    Until then, such information is proprietary --
                    available only to the manufacturers and to
                    NHTSA with the car owner's permission. 

                    This secrecy is the reason, partly, why not
                    much data exists on the devices. NHTSA
                    expects to gather data on several hundred
                    cases within the next couple of years. Hinch
                    predicts that most or all GM cars will have the
                    devices by the end of 2002. The government
                    has so far denied petitions to make event
                    recorders mandatory. 

                    "We need to study them more and ascertain
                    their usefulness," Hinch said. 

                    <snip due to length>

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