99-7073. Federal Motor Vehicle Safety Standards; Occupant Crash Protection  

  • [Federal Register Volume 64, Number 55 (Tuesday, March 23, 1999)]
    [Proposed Rules]
    [Pages 13947-13948]
    From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
    [FR Doc No: 99-7073]
    
    
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    DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTATION
    
    National Highway Traffic Safety Administration
    
    49 CFR Parts 571, 585, 587, and 595
    
    [Docket No. NHTSA 98-4405, Notice 3]
    
    
    Federal Motor Vehicle Safety Standards; Occupant Crash Protection
    
    AGENCY: National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA), DOT.
    
    ACTION: Notice of a technical workshop.
    
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    SUMMARY: Because biomechanical performance criteria are essential to 
    the successful design, evaluation, and regulation of vehicle safety 
    systems with air bags, NHTSA is holding a technical workshop to provide 
    an additional opportunity for a continuing dialog with the biomechanics 
    community to insure that appropriate criteria are considered during 
    current rulemaking activities. Attendance is open to both participants 
    (presenters and discussants) and observers.
    
    DATES: Public Workshop: We will hold the public workshop on April 20 
    and 21, 1999, from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. each day. Those wishing to 
    participate in the workshop should contact Dr. Rolf Eppinger, at the 
    address, telephone, or e-mail listed below, by April 8, 1999. If you 
    plan to present a statement during the meeting, please provide a copy 
    of your statement to Dr. Eppinger by April 13, 1999.
        Written Comments: Written comments may be made to the agency and 
    must be received by April 30, 1999.
    
    ADDRESSES: Public Workshop: We will hold the public workshop in room 
    2230 of the Nassif Building, 400 Seventh St., SW, Washington, DC 20590.
        Written Comments: If you wish to submit written comments on the 
    issues related to or discussed at this workshop, they should refer to 
    Docket No. NHTSA 98-4405, Notice 3, and be submitted to: Docket 
    Management, Room PL-401, 400 Seventh Street, SW, Washington, DC 20590 
    (Docket hours are from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m.)
    
    FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
        For non-legal issues: Dr. Rolf Eppinger, Office of Human-Centered 
    Research, 400 Seventh Street, SW, Washington, DC 20590 (telephone 202-
    366-4720; fax 202-366-5670, reppinger@nhtsa.dot.gov).
        For legal issues: Edward Glancy, Office of Chief Counsel, NCC-20, 
    National Highway Traffic Safety Administration, 400 Seventh Street, SW, 
    Washington, DC 20590 (telephone 20--366-2992; fax 202-366-3820).
    
    SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
    
    A. Background
    
        On September 18, 1998, we published in the Federal Register (63 FR 
    49958) a notice of proposed rulemaking (NPRM) to upgrade Standard No. 
    208, Occupant Crash Protection, to require advanced air bags. The 
    proposal would require that improvements be made in the ability of air 
    bags to cushion and protect occupants of different sizes, both belted 
    or unbelted, and would require air bags to be redesigned to minimize 
    risks of air-bag-induced injuries to infants, children, and other 
    occupants seated in a variety of nonstandard positions. The agency held 
    a public meeting relating to this proposal on November 23 and 24, 1998.
        Essential parts of our proposal are biomechanical performance 
    criteria (injury criteria and associated performance limits) that 
    evaluate and limit the impact to test dummies to appropriately safe 
    levels under specified test conditions. In the proposal, we referred to 
    and provided a supplemental report titled ``Development of Improved 
    Injury Criteria for the Assessment of Advanced Automotive Restraint 
    Systems' that detailed the sources and processes we used to arrive at 
    our proposed biomechanical performance criteria. Comments on these 
    proposed performance criteria ranged from agreement with NHTSA's 
    proposals to proposals of alternative criteria and limits.
        In light of the diversity of opinions expressed and in order to 
    ensure that we consider appropriate criteria in developing the final 
    rule, we will hold a technical workshop at which interested persons can 
    present, and workshop participants can discuss, the technical bases and 
    merits of the performance criteria they believe are the most 
    appropriate for the agency to adopt.
    
    B. Public Workshop
    
    1. Purposes and Issues
    
        The purposes of the workshop are to:
         Gather pertinent information and/or comment concerning the 
    technical bases and rationale for the biomechanical performance 
    criteria that should be considered by the agency for use in evaluating 
    and regulating the performance of advanced air bag safety systems.
         Obtain specific technical comments, discussion, and/or 
    constructive input related to the biomechanical performance criteria 
    and their limits as proposed by the agency in its Notice of Proposed 
    Rulemaking (NPRM) published in the Federal Register (63 FR 49958) on 
    September 18, 1998, or those criteria and limits as recommended by 
    commenters in response to the notice.
         Provide an opportunity for interested persons to present 
    other data and criteria thought biomechanically relevant and 
    appropriate for application in the automotive crash environment but not 
    cited by either NHTSA or in the comments on the September 1998 NPRM.
        Specific issues to be considered and discussed during the workshop 
    include:
         What are the appropriate criteria and their biomechanical 
    bases that can be used for the various body regions at risk in a crash? 
    (Specific body regions to be considered include as a minimum the skull/
    brain, the neck, and the thorax.)
         What statistical techniques are appropriate to extract 
    meaningful relationships between measurable engineering parameters and 
    the probability of a certain injury outcome?
         What factors should be considered in the evaluation of 
    alternative criteria?
         What scaling techniques are appropriate to extend a 
    criterion's form and limits to validly encompass the wide range of 
    occupant sizes being addressed by NHTSA? (From 12-month-old infant, to 
    a 50th percentile adult male.)
    
    2. Availability of Relevant Documents
    
        The September 18, 1998, proposal for advanced air bags, the 
    biomechanical support paper, and comments on the proposal have been 
    placed in the docket. To obtain them, you may either visit the docket 
    in Washington, DC, or access them via the Web.
        The docket is located in Room PL-401, 400 Seventh Street, SW, 
    Washington, DC. Docket hours are 9 a.m. to 4 p.m., Monday through 
    Friday. The Docket Management Web site is at ``http://dms/.dot.gov/''. 
    You should search for Docket number 4405.
        The September 18 proposal (typewritten version) and the two 
    technical papers are also available on NHTSA's Web site. The address 
    for this site is ``http://www.nhtsa.dot.gov/''. You should select 
    ``Advanced Air Bags'' under ``Popular Information.''
    
    [[Page 13948]]
    
    3. Procedural Matters
    
        The purpose of this workshop is to provide NHTSA an opportunity for 
    further dialog with the biomechanics community and interested parties 
    to gather information, data, and opinions on proposals by and to the 
    agency regarding biomechanical performance criteria needed to support 
    the agency's recently proposed rulemaking initiatives. To maximize the 
    output of the workshop within the limited time available, the first 
    topic to be addressed will concern the appropriateness of the various 
    statistical techniques used to analyze the available biomechanical 
    data. Subsequent topics, in the order of their presentation, will be 
    discussions of proposals for criteria for the skull/brain, neck, and 
    the torso. The order of events in each topic area will be: A short 
    presentation of the NHTSA proposal presented in the NPRM. Then, 
    presentations by persons and organizations on the proposals and/or 
    comments they made to the docket. This will be followed by 
    presentations of any new or previously uncited data by interested 
    persons, an open discussion by workshop participants of the technical 
    merits of the previous presentations, and a summary statement by the 
    workshop. To insure that the agency is fully cognizant of their issues 
    and positions taken at this workshop, a transcript of the workshop will 
    be made. Persons and organizations are also encouraged to submit 
    written comments on the issues related to or discussed at this 
    workshop. They should be submitted (preferably two copies) to Docket 
    Management, National Highway Traffic Safety Administration, Room PL-
    401, 400 Seventh Street, Washington, DC 20590. Submissions must refer 
    to Docket NHTSA 98-4405, Notice 3.
    
    4. Workshop Participation
    
        This workshop is a public workshop, and attendance is open to the 
    public. You may attend as a participant (a presenter or a discussant) 
    or an observer.
    
    C. Written Comments
    
        Interested persons are invited to submit comments on this notice. 
    Two copies should be submitted to Docket Management at the address 
    given at the beginning of this document.
        In addition, for those comments of four or more pages in length, it 
    is requested but not required that 10 additional copies, as well as one 
    copy on computer disc, be sent to: Dr. Rolf Eppinger, Office of Human-
    Centered Research, National Highway Traffic Safety Administration, 400 
    Seventh Street, SW, Washington, DC 20590. This would aid the agency in 
    expediting its review of all the comments. The copy on computer disc 
    may be in any format although the agency would prefer that it be in 
    WordPerfect 8.
        All comments must not exceed 15 pages in length (49 CFR 553.21). 
    Necessary attachments may be appended to these submissions without 
    regard to the 15-page limit. This limitation is intended to encourage 
    commenters to detail their primary arguments in a concise fashion.
        If a commenter wishes to submit certain information under a claim 
    of confidentiality, three copies of the complete submission, including 
    purportedly confidential business information, should be submitted to 
    the Chief Counsel, NHTSA, at the street address given above, and two 
    copies from which the purportedly confidential information has been 
    deleted should be submitted to Docket Management. A request for 
    confidentiality should be accompanied by a cover letter setting forth 
    the information specified in the agency's confidential business 
    information regulation. 49 CFR part 512.
    
    List of Subjects in 49 CFR Part 571
    
        Imports, Motor Vehicle Safety, Motor Vehicles.
    
        Authority: 49 U.S.C. 322, 30111, 30115, 30117, and 30166; 
    delegation of authority at 49 CFR 1.50.
    
        Issued on: March 17, 1999.
    L. Robert Shelton,
    Associate Administrator for Safety Performance Standards.
    [FR Doc. 99-7073 Filed 3-22-99; 8:45 am]
    BILLING CODE 4910-59-P
    
    
    

Document Information

Published:
03/23/1999
Department:
National Highway Traffic Safety Administration
Entry Type:
Proposed Rule
Action:
Notice of a technical workshop.
Document Number:
99-7073
Dates:
Public Workshop: We will hold the public workshop on April 20 and 21, 1999, from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. each day. Those wishing to participate in the workshop should contact Dr. Rolf Eppinger, at the
Pages:
13947-13948 (2 pages)
Docket Numbers:
Docket No. NHTSA 98-4405, Notice 3
PDF File:
99-7073.pdf
CFR: (4)
49 CFR 571
49 CFR 585
49 CFR 587
49 CFR 595