I haven't seen anything about this posted here yet but I may have missed it.
I guess there have been some big changes in the Snell Testing of helmets for 2010. I first read of it in the current issue of Motorcyclist Magazine. From what I got from the article Snell had always used the same weight for a head no matter what the helmet size where the other tests DOT and ECE used a head of varied weight with the smallest being the lightest and getting heavier as the size went up. That kind of seems like it makes sense. Being all heads are made of basically the same stuff, if you have more stuff (bigger head) it is going to weigh more. It isn't like someone with a small head is going to have a skull made from something heavier than someone with a big head. Well a study was done with frozen cadaver heads and it was determined that the head weights were in line with what the DOT and ECE Standards used for the head weight. Snell adopted this and will begin testing with different head weights.
So what does this really mean??? What I got from the story is that helmet manufaturers were forced to make different helmets for different markets based on what they wanted for a certification. If they were going for the Snell Cert they had to make a helmet that was much harder for the small size models than what they would for getting certified for DOT or ECE. The article made it sound like this additional hardness is a bad thing. So this being said it may not be a great thing if you wear a small helmet or you have a child that has a small helmet to have that Snell rating.
It is interesting that Snell is going to start testing in a manner that will be more inline (note: not the same) with what other certification processes use. This should make it cheaper for helmet manufacturers as they will not have to create all these different helmets but rather focus on creating something that will pass all tests no matter what the helmet size is and may make things safer in the long run.
Helmets will become available with the new M2010 Snell Standard on 1 Oct 2009.
I did a quick search and found this article.
Web Bike World
They stated in there that for those of us in North America it won't mean much change. I would think there would be a change though if you are purchasing a helmet that is in the small size ranges.
Here is a link to Snell's site that talks about the changes.
Snell Site
I guess there have been some big changes in the Snell Testing of helmets for 2010. I first read of it in the current issue of Motorcyclist Magazine. From what I got from the article Snell had always used the same weight for a head no matter what the helmet size where the other tests DOT and ECE used a head of varied weight with the smallest being the lightest and getting heavier as the size went up. That kind of seems like it makes sense. Being all heads are made of basically the same stuff, if you have more stuff (bigger head) it is going to weigh more. It isn't like someone with a small head is going to have a skull made from something heavier than someone with a big head. Well a study was done with frozen cadaver heads and it was determined that the head weights were in line with what the DOT and ECE Standards used for the head weight. Snell adopted this and will begin testing with different head weights.
So what does this really mean??? What I got from the story is that helmet manufaturers were forced to make different helmets for different markets based on what they wanted for a certification. If they were going for the Snell Cert they had to make a helmet that was much harder for the small size models than what they would for getting certified for DOT or ECE. The article made it sound like this additional hardness is a bad thing. So this being said it may not be a great thing if you wear a small helmet or you have a child that has a small helmet to have that Snell rating.
It is interesting that Snell is going to start testing in a manner that will be more inline (note: not the same) with what other certification processes use. This should make it cheaper for helmet manufacturers as they will not have to create all these different helmets but rather focus on creating something that will pass all tests no matter what the helmet size is and may make things safer in the long run.
Helmets will become available with the new M2010 Snell Standard on 1 Oct 2009.
I did a quick search and found this article.
Web Bike World
They stated in there that for those of us in North America it won't mean much change. I would think there would be a change though if you are purchasing a helmet that is in the small size ranges.
Here is a link to Snell's site that talks about the changes.
Snell Site