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Lt-Col A. Tack
01-12-2010, 09:02 AM
Avalanche airbag rises above the rush of snow

Monday, January 11, 2010

Many people dream of skiing off piste in deep virgin snow. But their dream would rapidly turn into a nightmare if they were to set off a slab avalanche. Researchers have now developed a remote triggering system for avalanche airbags.

The inviting expanse of shimmering snow contrasts with the benign blue sky above. The ski instructor briefly goes over the planned run, his first charge glides off into the distance … and sets off a slab avalanche. The group all look on helplessly as their friend is buried under a wall of snow.
Avalanche airbag rises above the rush of snow

Two airbags stowed in a backpack give a skier good buoyancy and help protect them in the event of an avalanche. Credit: ABS-Aschauer

Bernhard Budaker of the Fraunhofer Institute for Manufacturing Engineering and Automation IPA knows this kind of scenario is all too common. But researchers at the Institute recently developed a new avalanche airbag system for ABS Peter Aschauer GmbH, in which an electronic unit ensures a ski instructor or friend of any similarly hapless individual can remotely trigger the airbag stowed in their backpack. The product went on sale in December 2009. Avalanche airbags have been in use for over a quarter of a century. A simple tug on the activation handle will inflate two airbags stowed in a backpack. The massive extra volume they create gives the body additional buoyancy – the skier is no longer buried under the snow.

To date, however, the problem has always been that skiers have had to activate the airbag inflation system themselves.

“If skiers fail to notice in time that they’ve set off an avalanche, the airbag won’t help them,” says Budaker.

But now the IPA group manager and his team have replaced ABS’s manual activation unit with an electronic system, and fitted a new trigger: “We’ve redesigned the activation handle to incorporate a number of electronic components, so airbag inflation can be initiated by other members of a skiing party as well. It will be perfectly easy to retrofit all the old-style backpacks with the new system.”

When the traditional activation handle is pulled, it creates a pressure wave in the tube, which punctures a gas cartridge and causes the airbags to inflate. In the new system, a pyrotechnic element is used to ignite the gas cartridge. As Budaker explains, the electronic solution offers the advantage of allowing all the airbags carried by a particular skiing party to be networked: “We transmit on 868 and 915 MHz. The optical application programming interface permits specific groups to be defined. Group members simply need to touch all their handles together for them to become a unit.”

One option is for the ski instructor to be designated the “master”, his charges the “slaves”—in this case, only the master can trigger the others’ airbags. Alternatively, all members of the group can be designated masters and help each other in an emergency. The activation signal currently has a range of between 350 and 500 m, but this distance can be extended, given that every group member effectively acts as a relay station—as each trigger handle passes on the signal.

Link (http://www.rdmag.com/News/2010/01/Manufacturing-Avalanche-airbag-rises-above-the-rush-of-snow/)

http://img109.imageshack.us/img109/8673/avalancheairbag250.jpg

Rakki
01-12-2010, 11:22 AM
Why not just inflate a balloon that lifts them up into the sky and out of the avalanche's way?

Paddy51
01-12-2010, 11:29 AM
Neat idea - thanks for sharing.

Maschinengewehrschutze
01-12-2010, 12:03 PM
ride the avalance......i see.....
quite a rush

Lt-Col A. Tack
01-12-2010, 12:06 PM
Neat idea - thanks for sharing.

No problem, sir.
I don't ski, but thought it might be of interest.

brainplay
01-12-2010, 03:32 PM
I can see many expensive pranks in the future...

doctor rizz
01-13-2010, 04:59 AM
If they could make one like the one is "The World is not Enough" that would be awesome.

Paddy51
01-13-2010, 05:24 AM
No problem, sir.
I don't ski, but thought it might be of interest.

Avalanches are common here in Scotland and just after Christmas three walkers were killed. This kind of technology is therefore of interest in an area like this.

He219
01-13-2010, 11:21 AM
Two of my friends were equipped with airbag packs by their guides during a back-country ski trip to Revelstoke last year.
They've been put into service right away. Good stuff.

California Joe
01-13-2010, 11:27 AM
Very cool...

JJC
01-13-2010, 07:26 PM
There is another avalanche airbag system called "snowpulse" and it actually looks better in design because when it opens up it surrounds your head and chest for protection.

ego docui history
01-15-2010, 06:17 PM
What's snow? :) Y'all mean the Canadian rapper?

In all seriousness, that would have to rank right up there as one of the most awesome rides of your life.

Paddy51
01-15-2010, 06:21 PM
With all the recent snow the ski resorts and facilities in the Cairngorms (a short distance from where I live) have been very happy. One had more than 24,000 visitors last week. A couple of days ago one of the resorts announced it was closed! Reason for closure? Snow! Does not compute.... does not compute .... my head hurts .... :-)

Euroamerican
01-15-2010, 06:22 PM
Interesting approach. I really like it. I remember seeing the Avalung at a local cross country shop a few years back. This sounds like a better overall solution.

Fintin
01-15-2010, 08:48 PM
This was in a Warren Miller film way back in the 90s...

heli-cal
01-16-2010, 07:36 PM
This is a fantastic idea which will, without doubt save the lives of some whom are caught in avalanches.

Being relatively inexpensive, hopefully people won't be put of equipping themselves with this system.

I'm reminded of the air bag flotation devices which attach to snowmobiles and quad bikes.