Road safety has been at the forefront of Volvo's concerns for the past 85 years.
In 2008, the Swedish manufacturer gave itself an ambitious goal: "By 2020, nobody shall be seriously injured or killed in a new Volvo." Consequently, it has perfected an airbag system designed to protect pedestrians in the event of a collision, a system that will be standard on all new S40.
Volvo claims it should greatly reduce death and injury figures of road accidents. According to statistics, in Europe, 14 % of pedestrians hit by a car end up dead. In China, the same stat rises to 25 %. In total, each year, 1.3 million pedestrians lose their life.
The new safety system is set to activate itself between 20 and 50 km/h, since 75 % of accidents involving pedestrians happen at speeds below 40 km/h.
Seven sensors were integrated in the front bumper, when the vehicle comes close to an obstacle, they can tell whether it's a person or an object and deploy the airbags if needed within thousands of a second. The whole process from detection point to deployment only takes hundredths of a second.
In 2008, the Swedish manufacturer gave itself an ambitious goal: "By 2020, nobody shall be seriously injured or killed in a new Volvo." Consequently, it has perfected an airbag system designed to protect pedestrians in the event of a collision, a system that will be standard on all new S40.
Photo: Volvo |
Volvo claims it should greatly reduce death and injury figures of road accidents. According to statistics, in Europe, 14 % of pedestrians hit by a car end up dead. In China, the same stat rises to 25 %. In total, each year, 1.3 million pedestrians lose their life.
The new safety system is set to activate itself between 20 and 50 km/h, since 75 % of accidents involving pedestrians happen at speeds below 40 km/h.
Seven sensors were integrated in the front bumper, when the vehicle comes close to an obstacle, they can tell whether it's a person or an object and deploy the airbags if needed within thousands of a second. The whole process from detection point to deployment only takes hundredths of a second.