Safety and Training
Hurt Study Synopsis
Tom Green, Safety & Training Officer
Motorcycle Accident Cause Factors and Identification of
Countermeasures
A motorcycle accident study offers you and your students a
wealth of information about accidents and how to avoid them. The "Motorcycle
Accident Cause Factors and Identification of Countermeasures," is a study
conducted by the University of Southern California (USC). With funds from the
National Highway Traffic Safety Administration, researcher Harry Hurt
investigated almost every aspect of 900 motorcycle accidents in the Los Angeles
area. Additionally, Hurt and his staff analyzed 3,600 motorcycle traffic
accident reports in the same geographic area.
Reprinted here for your information and use are the
findings.
The final report is several hundred pages. If you choose
to have this document in your resource library, the order information is:
Motorcycle Accident Cause Factors and Identification of
Countermeasures, Volume 1: Technical Report, Hurt, H.H., Ouellet, J.V. and
Thom, D.R., Traffic Safety Center, University of
Southern California, Los Angeles, California 90007, Contract No. DOT
HS-5-01160, January 1981 (Final Report)
This document is available through:
The National Technical
Information Service, Springfield, Virginia 22161
Motorcycle Accident Cause Factors and Identification of
Countermeasures
Findings
Throughout the accident and exposure data there are
special observations which relate to accident and injury causation and
characteristics of the motorcycle accidents studied. These findings are
summarized as follows:
- Approximately three-fourths of these motorcycle
accidents involved collision with another vehicle, which was most usually a
passenger automobile.
- Approximately one-fourth of these motorcycle accidents
were single vehicle accidents involving the motorcycle colliding with the
roadway or some fixed object in the environment.
- Vehicle failure accounted for less than 3% of these
motorcycle accidents, and most of those were single vehicle accidents where
control was lost due to a puncture flat.
- In the single vehicle accidents, motorcycle rider error
was present as the accident precipitating factor in about two-thirds of the
cases, with the typical error being a slideout and fall due to overbraking or
running wide on a curve due to excess speed or under-cornering.
- Roadway defects (pavement ridges, potholes, etc.) were
the accident cause in 2% of the accidents; animal involvement was 1% of the
accidents.
- In the multiple vehicle accidents, the driver of the
other vehicle violated the motorcycle right-of-way and caused the accident in
two-thirds of those accidents.
- The failure of motorists to detect and recognize
motorcycles in traffic is the predominating cause of motorcycle accidents. The
driver of the other vehicle involved in collision with the motorcycle did not
see the motorcycle before the collision, or did not see the motorcycle until
too late to avoid the collision.
- Deliberate hostile action by a motorist against a
motorcycle rider is a rare accident cause.
- The most frequent accident configuration is the
motorcycle proceeding straight then the automobile makes a left turn in front
of the oncoming motorcycle.
- Intersections are the most likely place for the
motorcycle accident, with the other vehicle violating the motorcycle
right-of-way, and often violating traffic controls.
- Weather is not a factor in 98% of motorcycle accidents.
- Most motorcycle accidents involve a short trip
associated with shopping, errands, friends, entertainment or recreation, and
the accident is likely to happen in a very short time close to the trip
origin.
- The view of the motorcycle or the other vehicle
involved in the accident is limited by glare or obstructed by other vehicles
in almost half of the multiple vehicle accidents.
- Conspicuity of the motorcycle is a critical factor in
the multiple vehicle accidents, and accident involvement is significantly
reduced by the use of motorcycle headlamps (on in daylight) and the wearing of
high visibility yellow, orange or bright red jackets.
- Fuel system leaks and spills were present in 62% of the
motorcycle accidents in the post-crash phase. This represents an undue hazard
for fire.
- The median pre-crash speed was 29.8 mph, and the median
crash speed was 21.5 mph, and the one-in-a-thousand crash speed is
approximately 86 mph.
- The typical motorcycle pre-crash lines-of-sight to the
traffic hazard portray no contribution of the limits of peripheral vision;
more than three-fourths of all accident hazards are within 45deg of either
side of straight ahead.
- Conspicuity of the motorcycle is most critical for the
frontal surfaces of the motorcycle and rider.
- Vehicle defects related to accident causation are rare
and likely to be due to deficient or defective maintenance.
- Motorcycle riders between the ages of 16 and 24 are
significantly overrepresented in accidents; motorcycle riders between the ages
of 30 and 50 are significantly underrepresented.
- Although the majority of the accident-involved
motorcycle riders are male (96%), the female motorcycles riders are
significantly overrepresented in the accident data.
- Craftsmen, laborers, and students comprise most of the
accident-involved motorcycle riders. Professionals, sales workers, and
craftsmen are underrepresented and laborers, students and unemployed are over
represented in the accidents.
- Motorcycle riders with previous recent traffic
citations and accidents are over represented in the accident data.
- The motorcycle riders involved in accidents are
essentially without training; 92% were self-taught or learned from family or
friends. Motorcycle rider training experience reduces accident involvement and
is related to reduced injuries in the event of accidents.
- More than half of the accident-involved motorcycle
riders had less than 5 months experience on the accident motorcycle, although
the total street riding experience was almost 3 years. Motorcycle riders with
dirt bike experience are significantly underrepresented in the accident data.
- Lack of attention to the driving task is a common
factor for the motorcyclist in an accident.
- Almost half of the fatal accidents show alcohol
involvement.
- Motorcycle riders in these accidents showed significant
collision avoidance problems. Most riders would overbrake and skid the rear
wheel, and underbrake the front wheel greatly reducing collision avoidance
deceleration. The ability to countersteer and swerve was essentially absent.
- The typical motorcycle accident allows the motorcyclist
just less than 2 seconds to complete all collision avoidance action.
- Passenger-carrying motorcycles are not over represented
in the accident area.
- The driver of the other vehicles involved in collision
with the motorcycle are not distinguished from other accident populations
except that the ages of 20 to 29, and beyond 65 are over represented. Also,
these drivers are generally unfamiliar with motorcycles.
- The large displacement motorcycles are underrepresented
in accidents but they are associated with higher injury severity when involved
in accidents.
- Any effect of motorcycle color on accident involvement
is not determinable from these data, but is expected to be insignificant
because the frontal surfaces are most often presented to the other vehicle
involved in the collision.
- Motorcycles equipped with fairings and windshields are
underrepresented in accidents, most likely because of the contribution to
conspicuity and the association with more experienced and trained riders.
- Motorcycle riders in these accidents were significantly
without motorcycle license, without any license, or with license revoked.
- Motorcycle modifications such as those associated with
the semi-chopper or cafe racer are definitely overrepresented in accidents.
- The likelihood of injury is extremely high in these
motorcycle accidents-98% of the multiple vehicle collisions and 96% of the
single vehicle accidents resulted in some kind of injury to the motorcycle
rider; 45% resulted in more than a minor injury.
- Half of the injuries to the somatic regions were to the
ankle-foot, lower leg, knee, and thigh-upper leg.
- Crash bars are not an effective injury countermeasure;
the reduction of injury to the ankle-foot is balanced by increase of injury to
the thigh-upper leg, knee, and lower leg.
- The use of heavy boots, jacket, gloves, etc., is
effective in preventing or reducing abrasions and lacerations, which are
frequent but rarely severe injuries.
- Groin injuries were sustained by the motorcyclist in at
least 13% of the accidents, which typified by multiple vehicle collision in
frontal impact at higher than average speed.
- Injury severity increases with speed, alcohol
involvement and motorcycle size.
- Seventy-three percent of the accident-involved
motorcycle riders used no eye protection, and it is likely that the wind on
the unprotected eyes contributed in impairment of vision which delayed hazard
detection.
- Approximately 50% of the motorcycle riders in traffic
were using safety helmets but only 40% of the accident-involved motorcycle
riders were wearing helmets at the time of the accident.
- Voluntary safety helmet use by those accident-involved
motorcycle riders was lowest for untrained, uneducated, young motorcycle
riders on hot days and short trips.
- The most deadly injuries to the accident victims were
injuries to the chest and head.
- The use of the safety helmet is the single critical
factor in the prevention of reduction of head injury; the safety helmet which
complies with FMVSS 218 is a significantly effective injury countermeasure.
- Safety helmet use caused no attenuation of critical
traffic sounds, no limitation of precrash visual field, and no fatigue or loss
of attention; no element of accident causation was related to helmet use.
- FMVSS 218 provides a high level of protection in
traffic accidents, and needs modification only to increase coverage at the
back of the head and demonstrate impact protection of the front of full facial
coverage helmets, and insure all adult sizes for traffic use are covered by
the standard.
- Helmeted riders and passengers showed significantly
lower head and neck injury for all types of injury, at all levels of injury
severity.
- The increased coverage of the full facial coverage
helmet increases protection, and significantly reduces face injuries.
- There is not liability for neck injury by wearing a
safety helmet; helmeted riders had less neck injuries than unhelmeted riders.
Only four minor injuries were attributable to helmet use, and in each case the
helmet prevented possible critical or fatal head injury.
- Sixty percent of the motorcyclists were not wearing
safety helmets at the time of the accident. Of this group, 26% said they did
not wear helmets because they were uncomfortable and inconvenient, and 53%
simply had no expectation of accident involvement.
- Valid motorcycle exposure data can be obtained only
from collection at the traffic site. Motor vehicle or driver license data
presents information which is completely unrelated to actual use.
- Less than 10% of the motorcycle riders involved in
these accidents had insurance of any kind to provide medical care or replace
property.
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