NHTSA

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

User guide

Speed wobble and weave instability on e-scooters: two eigenmodes of two-wheeled vehicle dynamics, eigenvalue analysis of the 4-DOF linearized model (Whipple → Sharp → Meijaard 2007 Proc. R. Soc. A), why 8-10-inch wheels and a high h/L mass-center ratio produce 6-10 Hz wobble at 35-45 km/h, three damping mechanisms (tire side-slip + headset preload + steering damper), diagnostics and rider recovery protocol

Stability at speed is not a question of grip strength but a question of the eigenmode spectrum. A two-wheeled vehicle (bicycle, motorcycle, e-scooter) under forward motion has a linearized 4-DOF model from Whipple (1899) → Sharp (1971) → Meijaard, Papadopoulos, Ruina, Schwab (2007) Proc. R. Soc. A 463:1955-1982 whose eigenvalues yield **two oscillatory modes**: weave (2-4 Hz, lateral inverted-pendulum oscillation of the entire frame with steering in phase) and wobble (6-10 Hz, pure steering-only oscillation with the frame nearly stationary). Depending on forward speed `v`, the real part of one or both eigenmodes passes through zero — a bifurcation where the mode flips from damped to undamped, and any small disturbance (road irregularity, gust crosswind, rider input) excites self-sustained oscillation. Why e-scooter parameters (wheel radius R≈100 mm vs motorcycle 300 mm → 9× lower gyroscopic stabilization; h/L≈0.55 vs 0.35 → higher mass-center normalized to wheelbase → lower critical speed; m_rider/m_vehicle≈4-6 vs ~1 → rider dominates dynamics; headset preload often poorly maintained) shift wobble frequency into the 6-10 Hz range, where rider neuromuscular reflex (80-150 ms latency per Sharp 1971 and Cossalter 'Motorcycle Dynamics' 2nd ed. 2006) cannot stabilize phase and often makes wobble worse through positive-feedback transfer function. Three damping mechanisms — tire side-slip relaxation (Pacejka 'Tire and Vehicle Dynamics' 3rd ed. 2012), headset bearing rotational friction (preload-dependent, ISO 12240 angular contact specs), and external steering damper (hydraulic as in MX/motorcycles, OEM on Dualtron X2 + Wolf King). Diagnostic weekly 3-point play-check (headset move-test, fork twist-test, wheel-bearing rock-test). Rider recovery protocol at speed is counterintuitive and opposite to instinct: **do not grip tight (gripping tighter couples rider-as-amplifier into transfer function and worsens wobble — Sharp 1971); relax hands gently, shift weight rearward onto heels on the rear third of the deck (reduces front-wheel load and thus trail-dependent wobble torque), clamp the stem with knees (couples rider mass to frame, raises effective damping ratio), apply rear brake only (front brake at speed worsens wobble through geometric + gyroscopic coupling per Cossalter 2006 §8.6), and ease speed down to ~20 km/h where the mode naturally decays**. Manufacturer responses: Bird One geometry update 2019 (more conservative head angle after reports of high-speed wobble per IIHS micromobility data); Lime Gen 4 longer wheelbase; hyperscooter class (Dualtron X2, Wolf King GT Pro) ship with hydraulic steering dampers as standard. ENG-first sources: Meijaard et al. 2007 Proc. R. Soc. A 463:1955-1982 DOI 10.1098/rspa.2007.1857; Sharp 1971 JMES 13(5):316-329; Cossalter 'Motorcycle Dynamics' 2nd ed. 2006; Schwab & Meijaard 2013 Vehicle System Dynamics 51(7):1059-1090; TU Delft Bicycle Lab; Pacejka 'Tire and Vehicle Dynamics' 3rd ed. 2012; NHTSA HS-810-844; IIHS Status Report 2022.

13 min read

User guide

Human factors & ergonomics engineering of an electric scooter as the 30th engineering axis: human-machine fit axis — ISO 9241 series + ISO 7250-1:2017 + ISO/TR 7250-2:2010 + ISO 11226 + ISO 11228 + ISO 14738 + ANSI/HFES 100 + ANSI/HFES 200 + DIN 33402-2 + IEC 62366-1:2015 + ISO 26262-3:2018 controllability + ISO 2631-1 WBV + ISO 7730 thermal comfort + ISO 8995 lighting + WCAG 2.2 + SAE J2944 + NHTSA Driver Distraction Guidelines

Engineering deep-dive into human factors and ergonomics as the 30th engineering axis and 13th cross-cutting infrastructure axis — describes how the fit between rider and scooter is systematically engineered: anthropometric percentile coverage (P5–P95), postural envelope for the standing rider, control reach and grip dimensions (ISO 7250-1), display glance-time and character size (ISO 9241-300 series), cognitive workload and situation awareness, controllability classification C0/C1/C2/C3 for ASIL determination (ISO 26262-3 Annex B), whole-body vibration exposure limits (ISO 2631-1), thermal comfort PMV/PPD (ISO 7730), lighting (ISO 8995), accessibility target size + contrast (WCAG 2.2), driver-distraction lexicon (SAE J2944) and the NHTSA Driver Distraction Guidelines. Covers ISO 9241 series (usability definitions + interaction principles + HCD principles + HCD process + displays + input devices); ISO 7250-1 + ISO/TR 7250-2 anthropometry; ISO 11226 static postures + ISO 11228 manual handling 4-part; ISO 14738 workstation; ANSI/HFES 100 + 200; DIN 33402-2; IEC 62366-1 medical-device usability engineering methodology (applicable beyond medical); 29-row cross-axis matrix maps the ergonomics concept onto each of the 29 prior engineering axes; 8-step DIY owner ergonomic-fit checklist; 16 numbered sections.

15 min read

User guide

E-scooter NVH engineering: Noise/Vibration/Harshness as the fifth cross-cutting infrastructure axis — UN R51 (motor-vehicle noise) + UN R138 (AVAS quiet road transport) + UN R41 (motorcycle noise) + EU Regulation 540/2014 + FMVSS 141 (49 CFR 571.141 minimum sound for hybrid/electric) + ISO 362-1:2015 vehicle drive-by noise + ISO 2631-1:1997+Amd 1:2010 whole-body vibration + ISO 2631-5:2018 multi-shock + ISO 5349-1/-2:2001 hand-arm vibration (cross-ref) + ISO 11819-1:2023 SPB + ISO 11819-2:2017 CPX road-pavement noise + IEC 60068-2-6:2007 sinusoidal vibration + IEC 60068-2-64:2019 broadband random vibration + MIL-STD-810H:2019 Method 514.8 + ISO 16750-3:2023 automotive mechanical loads + ISO 8608:2016 road surface PSD + ISO 1680:2013 rotating electrical machines airborne noise + ISO 532-1:2017 Zwicker loudness + IEC 61672-1:2013 sound level meters + ISO 13473-1 mean profile depth + SAE J2889 + SAE J3043 + NHTSA NPRM 2009 + EU Reg 540/2014 AVAS mandate (M/N from 2019/2021) + Japan MLIT Article 43-3 + China GB/T 41788-2022

Engineering deep-dive into e-scooter NVH (Noise/Vibration/Harshness) as the fifth cross-cutting infrastructure axis — parallel to [fastener engineering as the joining-axis](@/guide/fastener-and-bolted-joint-engineering.md), [thermal management as the heat-dissipation axis](@/guide/thermal-management-engineering.md), [EMC/EMI as the interference-mitigation axis](@/guide/emc-emi-engineering.md) and [cybersecurity as the interconnect-trust axis](@/guide/cybersecurity-engineering.md). Covers: 10-row standards matrix (UN R51, UN R138, FMVSS 141, EU Reg 540/2014, ISO 362-1, ISO 2631-1/-5, ISO 11819-1/-2, IEC 60068-2-6/-64, MIL-STD-810H, ISO 16750-3, ISO 8608, ISO 1680, ISO 532-1, IEC 61672-1); 7-row noise-source matrix (motor PWM whine 8 kHz fundamental + harmonics + tire-pavement roll + gear mesh + bearing noise ISO 1680 + brake squeal + freewheel pawl + AVAS speaker); 6-row vibration-source matrix (motor unbalance + road surface PSD ISO 8608 A-H + suspension transmissibility + frame fork harmonics + bearing defect BPFO/BPFI + tire harmonic + freewheel impulse); 4-row AVAS regulations matrix (UN R138 EU + FMVSS 141 US + Japan MLIT Article 43-3 + China GB/T 41788-2022); 6-row mitigation matrix (motor laminations + skewing + spread-spectrum PWM + isolator pad + tuned-mass damper + visco-elastic absorber + acoustic enclosure); 4-row durability test matrix (IEC 60068-2-6 sinusoidal + IEC 60068-2-64 broadband random + MIL-STD-810H Method 514.8 + ISO 16750-3 automotive); 8-step DIY NVH check; 6-step DIY remediation; ISO 8608 road class A-H PSD scale; silent EV → AVAS adoption case study; 16 numbered sections.

16 min read

User guide

E-scooter brake system engineering: physics, DOT fluids, friction materials, EN/ECE/FMVSS standards and thermal management

Engineering deep-dive into the brake system — paralleling the behavioural «Braking technique» guide and the «Brake bleeding and pad care» maintenance protocol: physics of converting kinetic energy KE=½mv² into heat and why a 90-kg rider at 30 km/h must dissipate ~3 kJ per stop; hydraulics via Pascal's law and why master/caliper area ratio delivers 10–30× mechanical advantage; full comparative matrix of friction materials — organic resin-bonded (μ≈0.35–0.45, fade at 250 °C), semi-metallic (Cu + steel fibres, stable to 400 °C), ceramic (phased out by California SB 346), sintered (powder metallurgy, to 600 °C); brake fluid chemistry — DOT 3 (polyalkylene glycol, dry 205 °C / wet 140 °C, SAE J1703), DOT 4 (borate ester, 230/155, SAE J1704), DOT 5 (silicone, 260/180, SAE J1705, NOT ABS-compatible), DOT 5.1 (high-boiling glycol, 260/180), Shimano/Magura mineral oil — hygroscopy and why the «2-year change» rule exists; disc geometry — 304/410 stainless, 120/140/160 mm, vented/wave-cut/floating, m·c·ΔT thermal mass; thermal-management physics — Stefan-Boltzmann P_rad=ε·σ·A·(T⁴-T_amb⁴) ≈85 W + convection ≈450 W at 25 km/h = ~535 W sustained dissipation vs 2.8 kW burst on emergency stop; brake fade phenomenon — gas-out of organic pads vs sintered margins; complete comparative matrix of safety standards — EN 17128 (Europe PLEV ≤25 km/h, ≤4 m stopping from 20 km/h), EN 15194 (EPAC e-bike), EN ISO 4210-4 (bicycle drag test), ECE R78 (motorcycle Type Approval), FMVSS 122 (USA motorcycle), FMVSS 116 (brake fluids), UL 2272 (e-scooter system NYC LL 39); brake-by-wire, eABS, regenerative-blend integration; engineering ↔ user-facing symptoms (spongy lever / fade / screech / pulsating).

17 min read

User guide

E-scooter braking technique: progressive squeeze, threshold braking, weight transfer, dry vs wet, regen integration

An e-scooter's stopping distance isn't a brake spec — it's the sum of the rider's reaction distance (≈1.5 s × speed) and physical braking distance ½v²/(μg), which grows quadratically with speed: at 25 km/h reaction-plus-braking is ≈14–15 m on dry, at 45 km/h it's already 30–35 m, at 65 km/h over 60 m. The tire-road friction coefficient μ_dry ≈0.7 on clean asphalt drops to μ_wet ≈0.3 in rain, μ_paint ≈0.1 on fresh markings, and μ_steel ≈0.1 on wet manhole covers — meaning the same speed needs two to seven times more distance. Under a hard stop, weight transfers forward to 70–80 % because of the rider's high CoG and the e-scooter's short wheelbase, so the front mechanical disc does the bulk of the work and the rear (mech or regenerative) helps. Threshold braking means decelerating just below the lockup point, because μ_static > μ_kinetic. Progressive squeeze (force ramping over 0.2–0.3 s) lets weight transfer to the front wheel before full torque is applied — otherwise the front locks before it's loaded and you go over the bars. Regenerative braking delivers up to 20 % of mechanical peak and **vanishes at low speed** (no back-EMF), so an emergency stop without mech brakes is impossible. This guide is drill-oriented: physics, weight transfer, progressive vs grab, dry vs wet vs paint vs steel, regen integration, a 4-step emergency-stop protocol. ENG-first sources: MSF Basic RiderCourse Quick Tips, IAM RoadSmart, RoSPA, NHTSA/FHWA stopping-distance data, IIHS friction tables, Cycling UK braking guide, Park Tool / Sheldon Brown bicycle dynamics, Helsinki TBI series (PMC 8759433).

14 min read

User guide

Display and HMI engineering for electric scooters: sunlight-readability photometry (CR, cd/m², transflective LCD), glanceability ergonomics (ISO 15008, NHTSA 2-glance ≤ 2 s / 12 s, Fitts' law, Frutiger/DIN 1450), adaptive brightness (Weber-Fechner, PWM flicker per IEEE 1789-2015), environmental robustness (IP66, ISO 16750-3 vibration, IEC 60068 thermal −20…+70 °C), EMC (CISPR 14-1, ECE R10) and functional safety (IEC 62368-1, ISO 13849-1)

An engineering deep-dive into the one bidirectional channel between e-scooter and rider — paired with the introductory survey «Display, throttle, and error codes» (parts/display-throttle-error-codes): matrix physics (TN LCD with 90° twisted nematic vs IPS LCD with in-plane molecular switching vs OLED with organic electroluminescence via electron-hole recombination vs E-paper with electrophoretic ink); sunlight readability as a photometric problem (contrast ratio CR=(L_max+L_amb·R)/(L_min+L_amb·R) with ambient reflection, why a 250 cd/m² LCD against 100 000 lx direct sun drops to CR=1.05:1 without an anti-reflective coating, and transflective LCD as a hybrid with ambient backlight); glanceability as safety-critical ergonomics (ISO 15008:2017 in-vehicle visual presentation with minimum character-height-to-distance ratio 1:200, ISO 9241-303:2011 visual ergonomics, NHTSA Driver Distraction Guidelines 2013 + SAE J2364 2-glance principle ≤2 s single + ≤12 s total, Fitts' law T=a+b·log₂(D/W+1) for button-reach time, sans-serif Frutiger 1976 + DIN 1450:2013 Schriften — Leserlichkeit, kerning, x-height ≥60 % cap-height); adaptive brightness (Weber-Fechner logarithmic perception ΔI/I=const, ambient light sensor 0.01-100 000 lx, PWM dimming for LCD backlight with flicker frequency ≥1 kHz per IEEE 1789-2015 No-Observable-Effect threshold); environmental robustness (IEC 60529:2013 IP66 ingress dust-tight+powerful jets, ISO 16750-3:2012 road vehicle mechanical loads 10-2000 Hz random vibration, IEC 60068-2-1/-2 temperature −20…+70 °C cycling, IEC 60068-2-27 mechanical shock 1500g 0.5 ms half-sine, IEC 60068-2-30 damp heat 25/40 °C 95 % RH, ASTM B117-19 salt spray 5 % NaCl 35 °C 96 h); EMC (CISPR 14-1:2020 household-appliance emission, UNECE Regulation 10 Rev 6:2017 vehicle EMC 30 MHz-1 GHz radiated, ferrite chokes for PWM-backlight harmonic suppression); functional safety (IEC 62368-1:2018 hazard-based safety engineering with ES1/ES2 energy-source classes + PS1/PS2 power source + MS1/MS2 mechanical source, ISO 13849-1:2015 PL_d performance level so that display failure does NOT cause throttle/brake loss); and the full comparison matrix of 12 standards (ISO 15008 + ISO 9241-303 + ISO 9241-11 + NHTSA/SAE J2364 + IEEE 1789-2015 + IEC 62368-1 + IEC 60529 + IEC 60068-2 + ISO 16750-3 + CISPR 14-1 + UNECE R10 + ISO 13849-1).

18 min read

User guide

Electric scooter regulatory map: PLEV classification, 22 jurisdictions, safety certification (EN 17128 / UL 2272 / UL 2849 / EN 15194), EMC + radio (ECE R10 / FCC Part 15B / CISPR 12/25) — complete reference as of May 2026

Regulatory reference in three dimensions: (1) classification frameworks — EU PLEV (Personal Light Electric Vehicle) per EN 17128:2020 with max 25 km/h / 250 W continuous nominal / not subject to motor-vehicle type approval, versus US «no federal class» (CPSC 16 CFR Part 1500 consumer-product oversight without preemption), UK «PLEV trial-only» (legal only via approved rental schemes through 31 May 2026 per DfT), Canada provincial pilots (Ontario MTO Pilot Project per O. Reg. 389/19), Australia state-by-state (NSW «road use» trial + VIC trial + QLD legal since 2018); (2) detailed rules across 22 jurisdictions — Germany eKFV (BMVI / Bundesrat 2019, Versicherungsplakette mandatory, ≥14 years, 0.5 ‰ alcohol limit), France EDPM (Loi d'orientation des mobilités Loi 2019-1428, ≥12-14 years depending on municipality, 25 km/h), Spain DGT (Real Decreto 970/2020, max 25 km/h, helmet required under 18), Italy (Legge 160/2019 + Decreto 2022), Netherlands (RDW model-approval required, more restrictive), Sweden (Lag 2001:559 — allowed on bike paths since 2018), US 5 states (CA CVC 21229, NY NYS VTL § 1280-a + NYC Local Law 39/2023 with UL 2272/2849 mandate, FL HB 453, TX Transportation Code 551.401, WA RCW 46.04.336), Canada 3 provinces (ON Pilot 389/19, BC Pilot OIC 2020, QC trial since 2024), Australia 3 states (NSW shared trial Order 2023, VIC Trial regulations 2022, QLD Transport Operations 2018), Japan 特定小型原動機付自転車 special small mobility vehicle (Road Traffic Act amendment July 2023), Singapore Active Mobility Act 2017 with UL 2272 mandate June 2019, Ukraine Law №2956-IX «On Road Traffic» (ПЛЕТ, ≥16 years, 25 km/h); (3) safety + EMC certification — UL 2272:2019 vehicle-level electrical (NYC mandate per Local Law 39/2023, Singapore LTA mandate), UL 2849:2020 e-bike specific, EN 17128:2020 EU PLEV harmonized standard, EN 15194:2017+A1:2023 EPAC e-bike, IEC 62133-2:2017 battery cell safety mandatory globally, IEC 62619 industrial battery, ECE Regulation 10 Rev 6 (2017) automotive EMC, FCC Part 15 Subpart B § 15.101-15.107 unintentional radiators, CISPR 12:2018 vehicle EMI, CISPR 25:2021 vehicle in-band radio, CE marking + RoHS Directive 2011/65/EU + WEEE Directive 2012/19/EU.

19 min read

User guide

Riding an e-scooter at night: visibility as a three-component system, eye dark adaptation, conspicuity around cars, route planning

76% of US pedestrian and 56% of US bicyclist fatalities happen in darkness, dusk or dawn (NHTSA / FARS), and the Austin Public Health / CDC e-scooter injury study found the typical injured rider is a male aged 18–29 riding on the street at night. This guide moves night risk from the «hope they see me» bucket into the managed-risk bucket: visibility as a **three-component system** (active lights + passive retroreflectors + conspicuous clothing), the physiology of dark adaptation (5–10 min for cones, up to 30 min for full rod adaptation — Webvision NCBI), **biomotion configuration of retroreflectors** (Wood et al., QUT Vision and Everyday Function: retro material on ankles/knees/wrists increases driver recognition distance 3× vs a vest with the same area and 26× vs all-black clothing), the difference between detection and recognition in driver perception, front-light modes by lumens and context (Cycling UK: 50–200 lm for lit streets, 600+ lm for unlit roads, 1000+ for high speed), German StVZO § 67 and UK Highway Code rule 60 as the two regulatory poles, route planning with lit streets vs dark cut-throughs in mind, protocol for losing your front light mid-ride, the alcohol + night risk (PMC: 63% of nighttime riders alcohol-involved vs 22% daytime, 77% head/face injuries with alcohol vs 57% without). ENG-first sources: NHTSA Pedestrian Safety + Bicycle Safety countermeasures, FHWA EDC-7 Nighttime Visibility, Webvision (NCBI), Wood et al. biomotion studies, UK Highway Code rule 60, German StVZO § 67, Cycling UK light guide, PMC e-scooter alcohol/nighttime studies.

14 min read

User guide

Used electric scooter: pre-purchase inspection checklist

Structured 11-axis pre-purchase inspection of a second-hand electric scooter: paperwork and serial-number checks (proof of purchase, cross-check against the Xiaomi M365 June 2019 recall — 10,257 units, serials 21074/00000316–21074/00015107 and 16133/00541209–16133/00544518, manufactured 27 Oct – 5 Dec 2018), stolen-goods lookup (UK BikeRegister — Met Police-approved, 1.3M+ bikes registered, free BikeChecker; US Bike Index — 1.4M+ registrations, free), battery as 30–50% of residual value (Battery University BU-808: 300–500 cycles at 4.20 V/cell vs 1,200–2,000 at 4.00 V/cell; BU-808b — voltage stress and SEI growth; SOH via voltage sag under load, capacity test via full charge–discharge; visual cues — swelling, terminal corrosion, thermal marks), fire risk (CPSC 2019–2023: 227 incidents, 39 fatalities, 181 injuries), folding stem (Xiaomi M365 recall), motor and controller (bearing noise, error history on display), brakes (pad thickness, rotor warping, hydraulic line check), tires (NHTSA 49 CFR 574.5 — DOT 4-digit code, first two = week, last two = year; tread depth), lights/IP/connectors (corrosion), test ride (full-charge → load → discharge curve), negotiation red flags (missing serial, no charger, evasive seller, “battery just replaced” without invoice), post-purchase (firmware update, re-registration on BikeRegister/Bike Index).

14 min read