ASTM F1492

Articles, guides, and products tagged "ASTM F1492" — a combined view of every catalogue resource on this topic.

User guide

Helmets and protective gear for e-scooters: crash physics, the standards matrix, rotational mitigation, and FOOSH biomechanics

Engineering deep-dive into impact physics and certification mechanics for protective gear — parallel to the general regulatory overview in «Safety gear, traffic rules». Linear acceleration vs rotational velocity — HIC15 (NHTSA: 700 = 5 % risk of severe injury, 1000 = original 1972 FMVSS 208 threshold) and BrIC; the trade-off between peak force (kN) and duration (ms) as the central engineering parameter. Full standards comparison matrix: EN 1078:2012+A1 (1.5 m flat / 1.06 m curb, 5.42 m/s, 250 g max, single-impact), NTA 8776:2016 (~150 J, ≈ 6.2 m/s, written specifically for speed pedelecs up to 45 km/h), ASTM F1492 (multi-impact, flat + cylindrical + triangular anvils — a distinct skateboarding discipline), CPSC 16 CFR Part 1203 (2 m flat at 6.2 m/s / 1.2 m curb+hemispheric at 4.85 m/s, 300 g max), DOT FMVSS 218 (5.0–5.4 m/s, 400 g peak), ECE 22.06 (slow ≈ 6.0 m/s allows 180 g / fast ≈ 8.2 m/s allows 275 g), Snell B-95 (lower max acceleration, voluntary premium). Rotational mitigation technologies with physical explanation: MIPS (von Holst + Halldin 1996, 10–15 mm slip plane, up to −50 % rotational acceleration), WaveCel (inverted-V cell crumple, −16–26 % linear + up to 5× rotational reduction vs EPS), KOROYD (welded co-polymer tube structure, mostly linear, often paired with MIPS), SPIN. Virginia Tech STAR rating: 24 impact tests × 6 positions × 2 speeds, biofidelic linear + rotational combination. FOOSH biomechanics: the distal radius = 80 % of the wrist joint surface, Colles (pronation) vs Smith (supination) fracture patterns, Frykman classification; ASTM F2040 wrist guard splint design + prevalence (25 % of bone injuries in children / 18 % in the elderly / 8–15 % in adults). D3O dilatant shear-thickening polymer mechanism (Richard Palmer 1999) and EN 1621-1 Level 1 (≤ 18 kN mean / 24 kN peak — limb protector) vs Level 2 (≤ 9 kN / 12 kN) with a 5 kg striker at 4.47 m/s = 50 J. Back protectors EN 1621-2, eyewear ANSI Z87.1 / EN 166, retention test ECE 10 kg drop 0.75 m max 25 mm displacement. Fit protocol: two-finger above brow, Y-junction strap geometry under the ear, shake test, expiration 3–5 years (CPSC) / 5–10 years (Snell). The engineering source matrix runs parallel to existing applied-physics guides — braking, acceleration, cornering, climbing, descending, emergency maneuvers.

15 min read

Types of electric scooters

Kids electric scooters: the narrow recreational class of "100–250 W, 10–24 km/h, adult supervision required"

Profile of the kids electric scooter class — a recreational hobby segment under ASTM F2641 and EN 14619: a 100–250 W brushed DC motor with chain drive (not a BLDC hub), 24 V sealed lead-acid (SLA) batteries, ≤24 km/h by construction, no turn signals, no IP rating, no real suspension. Reference models: Razor E100, E200, E300, Pulse Performance Reverb. Regulatory frame: CPSC (US — recommendation ≥12 yrs / ≤16 km/h), ASTM F2641 and F1492, UL 2272, EN 14619 (EU, rider body mass 20–100 kg). Plus the American Academy of Pediatrics recommendation that motorized scooters should not be ridden by children under 16.

11 min read