The current British Standard for head protectors for cricketers has been recently revised to include a projectile-based battery of tests, the intention being to ensure that a certified helmet will also prevent contact of the ball or grille with the specified headform facial region. The purpose of this study was to characterise
the dynamic response of the headform to direct ballistic impacts for alternative headform mounting arrangements. On the one hand, and in accordance with the relevant sections of the Standard, what might be described as a “Constrained” set-up was evaluated while, on the other, an arrangement with significantly reduced stiffness, in line with that previously reported for the passive human neck, was subject to equivalent appraisal. For each mounting scenario, an air cannon was used to project a cricket training ball at three speeds toward the instrumented headform at three locations with five repeats per speed/location combination. High rate/resolution video and piezo-electric accelerometer data were collected and processed to determine the headform response. While differences between specific ball impact speed and location scenarios are set out in detail later in the article, overall observations are summarised as follows. From a ball-headform contact duration standpoint, video derived results showed ranges of 1.30 – 1.45ms (Constrained) vs. 1.26 – 1.41ms. Maximum ball deformations the timing of which enabling the event to be subdivided into “loading” and “unloading” phases, were found to be 82.5 – 86.2% (Constrained) vs. 82.8 – 86.4% of original ball diameter, mean peak headform accelerations during loading were found to be 860 – 1615m/s2 (Constrained) vs. 967 –
1638m/s2 while headform speeds at the end of the loading phase were found to be 0.5 – 0.92m/s Constrained) vs. 0.54 – 0.93m/s. Differences between headform response for the two mounting arrangements were observed to be more substantial during the loading rather than unloading phase.
Funding
This research was funded by the International Cricket Council which contributed to the completion of the research described in this article.
History
School
Mechanical, Electrical and Manufacturing Engineering
Published in
Proceedings of the IMechE Part P: Journal of Sports Engineering and Technology
Volume
231
Issue
4
Pages
324 - 335
Citation
STONE, B.W. ... et al., 2017.
On the dynamic response of an instrumented headform for alternative mounting stiffnesses when subjected to ballistic impacts. Proceedings of the IMechE Part P: Journal of Sports Engineering and Technology, 231(4), pp.324-335.
This work is made available according to the conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International (CC BY-NC-ND 4.0) licence. Full details of this licence are available at: https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/
Publication date
2017-05-05
Notes
This paper was accepted for publication in the journal, Proceedings of the IMechE Part P: Journal of Sports Engineering and Technology.