The development of standardized safety requirements for ballast-fastening devices in testing trucks

More information

Main author

Ferrer, A.

Co-Authors

Martínez, A.; Compte, J.

Type of media

PDF

Publication type

Lecture

Publication year

2014

Publisher

23. EVU Conference, Copenhagen

Citation

Ferrer, A.: The development of standardized safety requirements for ballast-fastening devices in testing trucks

EVU 2014 Copenhagen FerrerAmong the many types of tests carried out at testing facilities, several involve goods vehicles. These vehicles are usually loaded with concrete blocks as ballast in order to simulate a real load or to increase the stability of the whole vehicle.

However, these concrete blocks are not locked to the chassis and therefore a weak fastening might present safety problems in case of collision or hard braking manoeuvres. Thus, the fastening of the ballast must guarantee a minimum level of resistance. In order to establish a safe standardized fastening device, a study was performed using crash testing data as a base to validate a device through simulation and sled testing.

Based on data from a truck bollard test and PC-Crash® simulations, two fixing devices were assessed through sled tests. The first system consisted of two towropes hooked to the chassis of the vehicle. The second system was a metal structure consisting of two bars placed around the load and fixed to the chassis. A concrete block of 500 kg was placed on a structure especially developed to simulate the vehicle chassis. The test performed was based on a deceleration corridor previously defined and representative of a potential risk situation.

After the tests, the fixing device which performed best was defined in a CAE simulation to establish a minimum set of requirements, which will enable clients to use their own fixing device, but following the established requirements.