Hugh Janus Posted July 8, 2024 Share Posted July 8, 2024 CFMoto is exploring the concept of utilizing seatbelts to keep riders in place in the event of certain accidents. (CFMoto/)Seatbelts and motorcycles arenāt generally compatible. In the event of a crash, you probably want to get as far away as possible from a few hundred pounds of tumbling metal and plastic rather than being tethered to it. Apart from BMWās short-lived C1 scooterāwhich also had a roof and a safety cell around the riderāthere havenāt been many attempts to strap riders to their motorcycles in the name of safety.The last time we saw a seatbelt on a two-wheeled vehicle was BMWās C1 scooter. (BMW/)CFMoto has other ideas though, and thanks to technological improvements the idea of seatbelts on bikes is one that might be worth revisiting. The Chinese company has filed a patent application for a system that holds the rider onto a bike only in specific circumstances, allowing the bike to absorb the energy of frontal impacts against hard objects and stopping riders being thrown off by bumps or hard braking events, but releasing the rider in situations where the motorcycle is falling over or thereās a sideways force during the accident.This top view shows how the safety bars would pivot in front of the rider and wrap around them. (CFMoto/)The patent shows several variations on the same idea. The first uses a pair of rigid bars, one on each side of the rider, spanning the gap between the fuel tank and the back of the riderās seat. The bars are hinged at the fuel tank and use a simple mechanism to latch in place with a spring acting on a ball bearing that falls into a slot when the side bars are in either their āopenā or āclosedā positions. Even a small sideways force will open them, but vertical forces experienced when thereās a sudden braking event or crash that tries to push the rider up out of the seat are resisted.Itās more like the safety bars on an amusement park ride than a conventional seatbelt, but the idea is the same: to keep you in place. Like a roller coaster, the safety bars arenāt just there in case of a crash but to stop you from being thrown off the bike over bumps or, vitally, in the event of sudden unexpected braking. The latter is an issue that motorcycle companies are wrestling with now because technology like front-facing radar sensors mean that automatic emergency braking systems are viable from a technical standpoint but not from a practical one because a bike that slams its own brakes on is just as likely to throw you off as whatever itās trying to avoid.Another version would use a cloth belt that would attach behind the rider. (CFMoto/)The second version of the design also uses side bars, but this time they pivot behind the rider and come together in front rather than meeting at the tank. A second joint midway along the bars allows them to open wider to get on and off the bike. A third variation is a more traditional lap belt made of a clothlike material with a latch at the front. Instead of releasing the latch when thereās a sideways force, the back of the soft belt is mounted on a short post inserted into a slot between the rider and pillion seats, again using a spring mechanism to keep it in place during frontal crashes but allowing it to release when a sideways force is applied, so the riderāwith the belt still attached around his or her waistācan come off the bike.Another view of the bar version of the concept, which resembles amusement park lap bars. (CFMoto/)CFMotoās patent illustrates its system on the companyās big, V-twin-powered 1250TR-G tourer, which is currently sold only in China and uses a 140 hp version of KTMās LC8 V-twin engine. Itās already CFMotoās technology showcase, with an array of high-tech devices as standard, and would be the obvious choice for a radar-assisted auto-braking system. The seatbelt or bars, combined with a front radar, would allow a crash-mitigation braking system that could automatically use the full extent of the bikeās braking ability if it senses an impending impact with a solid objectāmost likely a car pulling into the bikeās pathāand keep the rider on board throughout. Even if the system canāt entirely prevent the crash, the seatbelt would stop the rider being thrown forward into the solid object in front, allowing the bikeās own structure to absorb the crash forces.While this system might not be something weāll see on production bikes in the immediate future, it illustrates the sort of peripheral complications that emerge from efforts to create safer motorcycles. In this case, automatic braking, which is a known technology that could be used right now but requires additional innovations to let it work as intended.Source Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Buckster Posted July 8, 2024 Share Posted July 8, 2024 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Pedro Posted July 8, 2024 Share Posted July 8, 2024 Yes, not that, but chinese airbags too Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
YamaHead Posted July 9, 2024 Share Posted July 9, 2024 Seat belts on motorcycles makes about as much sense as Tits on a Boar!Ā Ā ...probably cause more fatalities than Bikes without. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
YamaHead Posted July 9, 2024 Share Posted July 9, 2024 Just now, Pedro said: Donāt female boars have tits, though? Last time I checked, those were called sows.... 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Pedro Posted July 9, 2024 Share Posted July 9, 2024 8 hours ago, YamaHead said: Last time I checked, those were called sows.... I deleted it just as I posted, but clearly not in timeĀ Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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