In recent years, automobile racing has become one of the most popular sporting events in the United States and abroad. Auto racing's popularity is evidenced by the number of weekend auto races, extensive fan support and corporate sponsorship, and 24-hour cable television coverage. In addition, the sport's popularity is seen in the wide variety of race series available for drivers and spectators, including the Indy Racing League (IRL), NASCAR's car and truck series, FORMULA 1, CART, and IROC.
In automobile racing, high-performance vehicles travel many times around an oval track at very high speeds. Many of these tracks utilize outer retaining or containment walls, typically in the form of substantially rigid concrete barriers, to prevent race vehicles from leaving the track. Unfortunately, race vehicles frequently lose control and impact the rigid outer containment wall, resulting in high-impact energies and, occasionally, driver injuries and fatalities. Errant vehicles and driver injuries and fatalities do not occur only on race tracks, but on highways, interstates, autobahns, and other public roadways in the United States and abroad. An improved barrier system can mitigate the severity of high-speed, high-energy automobile accidents and potentially reduce the number of injuries and fatalities on race tracks and public roadways.
Over the years, there have been many efforts to advance the state of the art of safety barrier design and construction. Some of the simpler proposed solutions consisted of loosely-stacked foam blocks placed around the outer, exterior walls of the track or roadway to reduce the severity of impact between the errant vehicle and the rigid wall. An impacting vehicle, however, can penetrate these foam blocks and strike the retaining wall with little or no impact energy having been absorbed by the blocks. Further, portions of the foam blocks can be knocked onto the track or roadway by the impacting vehicle, creating a hazard for other vehicles that follow. Other barrier designs have incorporated used rubber automobile tires banded together at selected regions of road courses. Although these tire barriers offer significant impact attenuation, these systems capture virtually all impacting vehicles, significantly increasing the total velocity change during the crash and greatly increasing the risk of driver injury or fatality. Further, tire barriers can allow vehicles to under-ride the barrier and lead to intrusion into the vehicle's occupant compartment. This type of system is generally appropriate only for locations where vehicle redirection is not practical, such as the gore areas created at tight hairpin turns.
In the late 1990's, a barrier system known as the FLAG barrier was developed. The FLAG barrier was a compression-type barrier consisting of large diameter, thick-walled resilient cylinders attached to a rigid concrete racetrack wall. The cylinders were placed adjacent one another, forming a longitudinal row of cylinders positioned along the track side. Smaller diameter cylinders were placed on the traffic-side face of the longitudinal barrier and positioned and attached at the recessed regions between the larger cylinders to minimize the potential for vehicle pocketing. This barrier system was crash tested using a 1,248 kg vehicle impacting at a speed of 121.0 km/hr and an angle of 20.8 degrees. After compressing several of the cylinders, the test vehicle was smoothly redirected, exiting the system at a speed of 70.0 km/hr and an angle of 15.0 degrees. However, the vehicle's velocity change and exit angle were both relatively high.
In 1998, a polyethylene energy dissipating system (PEDS) was developed for use on oval racetracks. The PEDS barrier system was configured using high-density polyethylene (HDPE) cylinders covered by a thick HDPE skin on the front and top of the cylinders. To expedite construction and repair of the PEDS system, the barrier was designed and fabricated in modular units attached to the concrete wall using a cable restraint system. The cover skin was used to reduce the potential for vehicle pocketing in the front face and reduce or eliminate the potential for the driver's extremities becoming caught in the openings between the cylinders. During the running of an IROC race at the Indianapolis Motor Speedway in August, 1998, driver Arie Luyendyk was involved in a crash which resulted in his IROC car impacting rearward on the PEDS barrier installed downstream from the inside corner of turn four. The estimated impact condition for this event consisted of a 1,633 kg car striking the barrier at a speed of 209 km/hr and an angle of 32 degrees. Remarkably, the driver sustained no serious injury from this severe impact event. These relatively positive results were attributed to the PEDS barrier and the excellent energy management of IROC vehicles during rearward impacts. The PEDS barrier, however, sustained significant damage, and debris was spread across the racing surface. Based on the impact performance of the PEDS barrier, several modifications were made to increase its energy-absorbing capabilities and prevent the units from becoming dislodged.
Beginning in 1999, researchers at the Midwest Roadside Safety Facility (MwRSF) in Lincoln, Nebr. in cooperation with IRL and NASCAR, investigated several energy-absorbing barrier concepts for use in high-speed racetrack and roadway applications using both computer simulation modeling and full-scale vehicle crash testing. The energy-absorbing properties and potential of both HDPE and foam materials were investigated. This testing and simulation indicated that HDPE barrier systems allowed impacting vehicles to gouge into the material and create snagging and pocketing, indicating to the MwRSF researchers that HDPE barrier faces offered no improvements or advantages over concrete barriers.
Simulation and testing of vehicle barriers indicates that lateral accelerations imparted to impacting vehicles and their occupants can be greatly reduced by adding even modest amounts of energy dissipation to rigid barrier systems. Further, testing has indicated that the utilization of relatively stiff longitudinal barrier elements would minimize vehicle rebound from the barrier. Subsequently, an energy-absorbing barrier system utilizing rubber energy absorbers with steel reinforced fiberglass fender panels was developed. This barrier design included a cable and strut mechanism by which the fender panels were attached to the vertical concrete backup structure to allow the barrier to deflect rearward with limited longitudinal motion. However, the relatively short “fish scale” fender panels and the soft energy absorbers utilized in this barrier caused the system to deform around the front of the impacting vehicle, increasing the potential for snagging and/or high rebound angles at increased impact speeds. Further, the cables and struts used to mount the barrier to the backup structure also posed potential snagging problems during high-speed impacts.
Accordingly, it is an object of the present invention to provide an energy-absorbing vehicle barrier system for use on high-speed race tracks and public roadways.
Another object of the present invention is to provide an energy-absorbing vehicle barrier system that reduces the potentially harmful deceleration forces experienced by an impacting vehicle and its occupants.
It is a further object of the present invention to provide an energy-absorbing vehicle barrier system that reduces or eliminates the potential for vehicle pocketing, gouging, or snagging in either direction of travel.
Yet another object of the present invention is to provide an energy-absorbing vehicle barrier system comprised of readily-available materials and that may be relatively easily and quickly repaired following a damaging vehicle impact.
A further object of the present invention is to provide a single energy-absorbing vehicle barrier configuration suitable for impacts from either open-wheel or stock car vehicles.
The present invention provides for a high-impact, energy-absorbing vehicle barrier system. The barrier system generally includes a substantially rigid outer containment wall coupled via coupling assemblies with an energy-absorbing inner impact wall, and energy-absorbing cartridges positioned between the impact wall and containment wall. A preferred embodiment of the barrier system of the present invention includes an impact wall comprised of a plurality of rectangular or square cross-sectioned structural steel tubes welded to one another to present a substantially smooth, uniform wall to passing vehicles. The impact wall generally consists of a number of impact wall sections coupled with one another by sliding splice units having beveled end faces. The face of the impact wall may be coated with a lubricant, such as zinc-rich paint, to further minimize friction between the impact wall and an errant, impacting vehicle. The energy-absorbing cartridges, which in one embodiment consist of a plurality of foam sheets, compress and crush between the containment wall and impact wall and absorb energy from a vehicle striking the face of the impact wall. The deflection and deformation of the impact wall tubes toward the containment wall further dissipates energy of the impacting vehicle. The barrier system of the present invention is suitable for use on high-speed race tracks and public roadways, significantly reduces peak vehicular decelerations experienced by an impacting vehicle and its occupants, minimizes the potential for vehicle gouging, snagging, or pocketing in either direction of travel, and mitigates the severity of high-energy vehicular impacts. The coupling assemblies and sliding splice units provide for relatively easy and quick removal and replacement of damaged impact wall sections.
The new, high-impact, energy-absorbing barrier system of the present invention was developed to mitigate the severity of high-energy vehicular impacts. In impacts with rigid walls, vehicular decelerations are often maximized as the rigid wall does not displace and substantially all of the impact energy must be dissipated by the vehicle structure (e.g. the vehicle body, engine, transmission, tires, etc.). The new barrier system of the present invention reduces the severity of an impact when a vehicle strikes a containment wall at a high speed. The system reduces or eliminates snagging or pocketing in both directions of vehicle travel and also provides energy dissipation in both the impacting vehicle and the energy-absorbing barrier, significantly reducing peak vehicular and vehicle occupant decelerations when compared to the decelerations observed during an impact with a rigid containment wall. The mitigation of these high vehicular decelerations greatly reduces the potential for serious injury or fatality as a result of the impact with the exterior containment wall.
The barrier system of the present invention is designed primarily for use as protection for errant vehicles at high-risk locations such as on the outside of curves on race tracks and heavily congested high-speed roadways. Since this new barrier is primarily, but not exclusively, a longitudinal barrier, the technology has potential application as a roadside barrier in high accident locations such as curves in tunnels and congested roadways. The technology also has application in retrofitting rigid bridge railings and other permanent or temporary traffic barriers. For longitudinal barrier applications, the system would primarily be intended to mitigate the severity of oblique-angle vehicular impacts. However, this technology may also be applied to severe, high-impact events where perpendicular impacts to the system are anticipated. These higher-severity events include situations where crash cushions, end terminals, and truck-mounted or trailer-mounted attenuators are used. The technology of the present invention also may be used for energy-absorbing docks for tractor-trailers and ships.
Certain embodiments of the present invention were disclosed in U.S. patent application Ser. No. 10/118,728, currently pending in the United States Patent and Trademark Office and incorporated herein by reference.
In the accompanying drawings, which form a part of the specification and are to be read in conjunction therewith, and in which like reference numerals are used to indicate like parts in the various views:
As seen in
The containment wall 12 is generally constructed of heavily reinforced concrete, but may be constructed of stone, fabricated steel, or other substantially rigid material. The impact wall 14 of the present invention is configured such that it can be easily attached to an existing containment wall 12 such as those typically used at race tracks and high-speed tunnels, or an entire barrier system 10, including impact wall 14 and containment wall 12, may be constructed for newly-constructed race tracks and roadways.
The impact wall 14 is preferably constructed from a series of structural steel tubes 20, as best seen in
When welded or otherwise coupled with one another, the tubes 20 form the impact wall 14 and, as seen in
The use of structural steel tubes 20 to form the impact wall 14 allows the wall 14 to be manufactured from readily-available structural materials and permits a wide range of barrier height, as measured from the track or roadway surface to the top of the device. In one embodiment designed for use at the Indianapolis Motor Speedway in Indianapolis, Ind. and disclosed in U.S. patent application Ser. No. 10/118,728 (incorporated herein by reference), the impact wall 14 was formed of four (4) structural steel tubes 20 each having a rectangular cross section and a width of six (6) inches, the bottom tube 20 having a height of approximately twelve (12) inches, the two (2) inner tubes 20 each having a height of approximately eight (8) inches, and the upper tube 20 having a height of approximately ten (10) inches, for a total impact wall 14 height of approximately thirty eight (38) inches.
In another embodiment, best seen in
It will be understood that the impact wall may be constructed of a single unitary member or tube 20, or may be constructed of any number of tubes 20 or other structural members having varying dimensions and wall thicknesses.
The barrier system 10 of the present invention may include a single section of impact wall 14, or may be formed of a plurality of impact wall sections coupled with one another by splice units 34. In a particular multi-section embodiment such as that depicted in
The internal, “hidden” splice units 34 reduce the potential that the sections of impact wall 14 will separate or that the joints between the sections of impact wall 14 will open up when a vehicle impacts the wall 14. The outer edges of the tubes 20 or wall sections may be beveled at the wall 14 or tube 20 ends, such that the joints between sections of the impact wall 14 have a shallow, V-shaped indentation 35, as best seen in
The impact wall 14 and containment wall 12 are preferably removably coupled to one another by coupling assemblies. In one embodiment, disclosed in U.S. patent application Ser. No. 10/118,728 and incorporated herein by reference, cable restraint assemblies are positioned along and between the containment wall and the impact wall and serve to removably couple the impact wall with the containment wall. In this embodiment, the cable restraint assemblies are positioned along and between the impact and containment walls at approximately ten (10) foot intervals. The cable restraint assembly generally consists of a cable (preferably ⅜″ diameter galvanized wire rope), a ferrule fixed to an end of the cable, and a threaded rod fixed to the other end of the cable. A keyhole plate is positioned over the aperture in the wall of the tube and attached to the wall of the tube as by welding. The keyhole plate has a partially threaded keyhole aperture which receives the ferrule and a keyhole bolt or plug. An internally threaded sleeve is embedded in the containment wall and receives the threaded rod. The containment wall and impact wall are thus removably coupled by placing the ferrule through the aperture and sliding the cable downwardly into position in the aperture. The plug is then threaded into the upper, threaded portion of the aperture. The sleeve is anchored in the containment wall and the rod is threaded into the sleeve. The sleeve and cable may extend through the entire thickness of the containment wall to provide additional cable anchorage strength.
Another, improved coupling assembly 40 for anchoring the impact wall to the containment wall is depicted in
The improved coupling assembly 40, which incorporates straps 42, provides an improved energy-dissipating, anchorage system wherein the straps 42: (1) are allowed to stretch during unloading and rebound of the vehicle away from the containment wall; (2) provide improved management of the peak loads in the attachment system; and (3) prevent the attachment system from being compromised. Quick-release, high-strength, corrosion-resistant alloy load pins 44 (constructed from 17-4 H1150 stainless steel, for example) are used to transmit the rebound load to the plates 46 coupled with the impact wall 14 and containment wall 12. The load pin 44 diameter and material specifications are chosen to prevent excessive pin deformations during dynamic loading, to allow for easy removal after unloading, if needed, and to withstand extremely corrosive environments near coastal regions as well as in racetrack settings where various vehicular fluids may contact the surrounding barrier hardware.
As seen in
This improved coupling assembly 40 provides enhanced energy-dissipation characteristics, offers greater structural integrity following a severe impact event, allows for the coupling system 40 to be reused without repair following high-energy impacts into the barrier system 10, and mitigates peak rebound loads by permitting the straps 42 to stretch, but not break, under dynamic loads in tension.
It will be understood that other mechanical coupling systems having threaded, bolted, hooked, or relatively quick-release connection mechanisms known to persons skilled in the art may be used to removably couple the impact wall 14 with the containment wall 12. The coupling assemblies 40 serve to position the impact wall 14 adjacent the containment wall 12, hold the impact wall 14 in an upright, vertical position, prevent the impact wall sections from pulling away from the containment wall 12, and spread the impact load over a greater length of the barrier system 10 by reducing the total amplitude and increasing the period of the bending wave induced in the tubes that comprise the impact wall 14.
As seen in
In another embodiment, multi- or variably-staged energy absorbing cartridges 18 are used to allow for one cartridge configuration to be capable of accommodating impacts with both open-wheel and stock car vehicles. In this embodiment, which also may consist of a number of “sandwiched” foam sheets 54 (as previously described), the energy-absorbing cartridge 18 includes a tapered front region adjacent the impact wall 14 that provides reduced impact resistance or energy-absorbing capacity in one end of the cartridge. This tapered cartridge configuration, depicted in
This same tapered cartridge configuration also provides an effective energy-management system for heavier, stock vehicles (e.g., NASCAR series cars) that can compress nearly the entire cartridge in “worst-case” impact scenarios. During severe impacts, these heavier cars will easily crush the front, tapered stage(s) of the cartridge 18 and, subsequently, will crush the rearward stage(s) of the cartridge 18 where safe attenuation occurs. In short, this tapered configuration allows one cartridge configuration and spacing to be used for resisting both open-wheel and stock car vehicle impacts without the need to change cartridge configuration or spacing between races. To accommodate the range of vehicle types and impact conditions, specially-designed blocks, sheets, or cartridges having varying structural and/or physical properties may be employed. For example, the foam blocks, sheets, or cartridges may have voids or hole reductions located in strategic locations. As another example, alternating or staggered types or sizes, of blocks, sheets, or cartridges may be used. Blocks, sheets, or cartridges manufactured from two or more types of materials having varying strength and/or densities also may be used.
Finally, “partial cartridges” or “half cartridges” 55 may be used at certain spaced locations between the impact wall 14 and containment wall 12, as seen in
It will be understood that the energy-absorbing cartridges 18 may be constructed of any number of materials and configurations, including polystyrene foam sheets or blocks, expanded bead polystyrene foam, friable polyurethane foam sheets or blocks of varying or constant thicknesses and widths, or rubber or HDPE cylinders or tubes positioned in individual or concentric, telescoping fashion between the impact and containment walls. The energy-absorbing barrier system 10 of the present invention may be “tuned” to accommodate virtually any impact condition by adjusting the cartridge 18 material, thickness, width, height, stress rating, and configuration. It will be understood, for example, that cartridges 18 may consist of a number of sheets or blocks having varying widths so that a cartridge 18 has a substantially tapered, T-shaped, or trapezoidal cross-section as seen from a plan view. The cartridges 18 are relatively easy to remove from and reinstall between the impact and containment walls to enable the user to tune the stiffness and other performance characteristics of the barrier system 10 to match the expected impact conditions for a given site, such as impact speed, vehicle type and weight, and impact angle, and to replace compressed, crushed, cracked, or otherwise damaged cartridges.
In one tested embodiment of the barrier system 10 of the present invention, the energy-absorbing cartridges 18 consisted of seven (7) stacked sheets 54 of OWENS CORNING extruded polystyrene foam having a rating of 15 psi, each sheet 54 having a thickness of two (2) inches, a width of twenty (20) inches, and a height of forty (40) inches. The multi-sheet cartridges were spaced along and between the impact and containment walls at approximately ten (10) foot intervals on center. This embodiment was tested with an Indy open-wheel style vehicle weighing approximately 2,035 lbs striking the face of the impact wall 14 at an approximate speed of 143 m.p.h. and an angle of approximately 20.7 degrees. The vehicle contacted the impact wall at a point approximately ten (10) feet upstream of a joint between impact wall sections and slightly downstream of a cartridge, and exited the impact wall at a velocity vector angle of approximately 4.5 degrees. With this particular tube and cartridge configuration, the tests indicated that the impact wall did not contact or “bottom out” on the containment wall and that the deceleration forces applied to the impacting vehicle and its occupant were substantially mitigated. It will be understood by persons skilled in the art that the barrier system may readily be tuned for specific applications. The number, material, and dimensions of tubes, the spacing of cartridges, and the configuration, thicknesses, and widths of foam sheets all may be adjusted depending upon several factors, including the expected impact angle, impact velocity, and vehicle type(s) (e.g. INDY open-wheel type and/or NASCAR type vehicle, standard car, truck, etc.). In one installed embodiment of the present invention incorporating the tapered cartridge configuration previously described, the cartridge 18 was formed of a number of foam sheets 54 “sandwiched” to a thickness of approximately 22.0 inches, and the cartridges were spaced 1,707 mm (67.2 inches) on center.
The barrier system 10 of the present invention may be continuous and surround the entire periphery of a race track or road way, or the system may be positioned at select locations along the periphery of the track or roadway, at turns or high-speed corners, for example. In the event the barrier system is not continuous, transition sections 56 may be provided at the upstream and/or downstream ends of the impact wall. These transition sections 56, as the name implies, provide a smooth transition from the containment wall 12 to the impact wall 14 and reduce the likelihood of a vehicle impacting and snagging on the blunt end of a section of the impact wall 14. The transition sections 56 may be constructed of tubular members like those of the impact wall, and may be coupled with the adjacent impact wall section by splice units similar to those previously described herein.
In operation, an errant vehicle strikes the face of the impact wall 14. The hollow structural steel tubes 20 which comprise the impact wall 14 deflect towards the containment wall 12, compressing and/or crushing portions or all of the energy-absorbing cartridges 18 between the deflected impact wall 14 and containment wall 12. To ensure that vehicle and driver deceleration forces are minimized, the tubes 20 and cartridges 18 are configured and spaced such that the deflecting impact wall 14 will not contact or “bottom out” on the substantially rigid containment wall 12, as discussed above. The energy of the impacting vehicle is absorbed by the elastic and/or plastic deformation of the tubes 20, the compression and/or crushing of the energy-absorbing cartridges 18, and the crumpling or crushing of portions of the impacting vehicle itself.
In the event of a extremely high-speed impact, a tube or tubes 20, an entire impact wall section, and/or one or more cartridges 18 may become plastically deformed or otherwise damaged such that replacement of a section of impact wall 14 and/or one or more cartridges 18 or portion(s) thereof is desired. The barrier system 10 of the present invention allows for relatively quick and easy repair and replacement of a damaged section of impact wall 14. To replace such a section, the coupling assembly 40 must be uncoupled from the impact wall 14, and the splice units 34 on each end of the section to be replaced must be slidably removed from the tubes 20 of the section to be replaced. To accomplish this, the brace bolts 26 and sliding splice bolts 38 are typically first removed or loosened sufficiently such that the splice units 34 are disengaged from the walls of the tubes 20 and may slide and telescope within the tubes 20. The sliding splice bolts 38 are generally grasped and pulled to the side along the length of the tube slots 28 until the splice units 34 completely clear the joint between the section of impact wall 14 to be replaced and the adjacent section(s). The coupling assembly 40 is then disconnected from the impact wall 14 section to be replaced. The damaged section may then be removed, and a new, undamaged section installed in its place by coupling the new section to the adjacent section(s) via the splice units 34 and by coupling the new section to the containment wall 12 via the coupling assembly(ies) 40. In the event one or more energy-absorbing cartridges 18 are cracked, crushed, plastically deformed, or otherwise damaged, new cartridges 18, or parts thereof, may be readily replaced. This is accomplished by removing the damaged cartridge(s) 18 and positioning the new cartridge(s) 18 between the containment wall and impact wall section before an impact wall section is installed or by simply sliding new cartridge(s) 18 between already-installed and coupled impact and containment walls.
It will be seen from the foregoing that this invention is one well adapted to attain the ends and objects set forth above, and to attain other advantages which are obvious and inherent in the device. It will be understood that certain features and subcombinations are of utility and may be employed without reference to other features and subcombinations. It will be appreciated by persons skilled in the art that the present invention is not limited to what has been particularly described above. Rather, all matter described above is to be interpreted as illustrative and not limiting.
Not applicable. This application claims the benefit of U.S. Provisional Application No. 60/605,775, filed on Aug. 31, 2004, which is incorporated herein by reference.
Number | Date | Country | |
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60605775 | Aug 2004 | US |