February 18, 2005

TODAY GOD GLANCES AROUND AT HIM:

Samuel Alderson, Crash-Test Dummy Inventor, Dies at 90 (MARGALIT FOX, 2/18/05, NY Times)

Samuel W. Alderson, a physicist and engineer who was a pioneer in developing the long-suffering, curiously beautiful human surrogates known as automotive crash-test dummies, died Feb. 11 at his home in Los Angeles. He was 90.

The cause was complications of myelofibrosis and pneumonia, his grandson Matthew Alderson said.

The dummy that is the current industry standard for frontal crash testing in the United States is a lineal descendant of one Mr. Alderson began manufacturing for the aerospace industry in the early 1950's. It is used today by automakers and government agencies to test safety features like seat belts.

Seat belts, air bags and other safety features are estimated to have saved nearly 329,000 lives since 1960, according to a study released last month by the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration.

"You have to consider that a test dummy basically motivates all restraint design, whether belts or air bags," Rolf Eppinger, chief of the National Transportation Biomechanics Research Center at the safety administration, said in a telephone interview.

Posted by Orrin Judd at February 18, 2005 10:14 AM
Comments

His ideas and inventions saved millions of lifes worldwide.

Rest in peace

Posted by: César Álvarez at February 18, 2005 11:11 AM

He was 90! Complications from old age.

Yeesh.

and I'll bet he never thought they'd become toys.

Posted by: Sandy P at February 18, 2005 2:22 PM
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