HEADREST - ορισμός. Τι είναι το HEADREST
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Τι (ποιος) είναι HEADREST - ορισμός

AN AUTOMOTIVE SAFETY FEATURE
Head rest; Headrest; NECK-PRO; Active Head Restraint; Active head restraint
  • Saab Active Head Restraint

headrest         
(headrests)
A headrest is the part of the back of a seat on which you can lean your head, especially one on the front seat of a car.
N-COUNT
headrest         
¦ noun a padded support for the head on the back of a seat or chair.
City safety         
  • 2008 LS 600h forward PCS diagram, with radar (<span style="background:SkyBlue">blue</span>) and [[stereo camera]] (<span style="background:pink">red</span>) coverage
  • Laser sensor of VW Up
Precrash system; Pre-collision system; Collision Mitigation Avoidance System; Pre-Safe; Forward collision warning; Collision Warning Brake Support; Lexus Pre-Collision System; Collision avoidance systems; Pre-collision system (PCS); Pre-Collision System; Advanced emergency braking system; Autonomous emergency braking; Automatic Braking; Autonomous Emergency Braking; Collision-avoidance system; Pre sense; Autonomous braking; Front Assist; Proactive Occupant Protection; Multi-collision brake; Automatic emergency braking; Braking guard; Active Protection; Driving Assistant; City Collision Mitigation; Pedestrian Protection; City Emergency Braking; Front Collision Warning; Advanced Pre-Collision System; Pre-crash system; Pre-Crash Safety Whiplash Injury Lessening; Rear Pre-Crash; Pre-Collision System with Pedestrian-avoidance Steer Assist; Steering Bypass Assist; Pre-Collision Intelligent Headrest; A-PCS; Driving Assistant Plus; Emergency Steering Assist; City emergency braking; Forward Collision Warning; Collision Warning with Brake Support; IntelliSafe; Cyclist detection; City Safety; COLLISION PREVENTION ASSIST; Active Brake Assist; Automatic Emergency Braking; Collision Mitigation Braking System; Collision Prevention Assist; PRE-SAFE; PRE-SAFE Brake; Pre-Safe Brake; Collision Prevention Assist Plus; BAS PLUS; PRE-SAFE PLUS; PRE-SAFE Impulse; Imminent collision breaking; Pre-Collision Assist; Forward Alert; Active Braking; Active City Stop; City Emergency Braking with Pedestrian Monitoring; City Brake; COLLISION PREVENTION ASSIST PLUS; Forward Collision Warning with Brake Support; Forward collision warning with brake support; Automatic Post-Collision Braking System; Avoidance Assistant; Collision Warning and Brake Support; Collision Mitigation Brake System; Forward collision warning system; Active emergency braking; Advanced Emergency Braking System; Imminent collision braking; Collision Avoidance; Front crash prevention system; Subaru EyeSight; Toyota Safety Sense; Lexus Safety System+ 2.0; Lexus Safety System+; Collision prevention; List of cars with collision avoidance features; Forward collision alert; Crash avoidance technology; Crash prevention system; Multi Collision Brake System; Pre-Collision System (PCS); Automatic emergency brake; Pre-crash systems; Forward collision warning systems; Collision mitigation system; Collision mitigation systems; Computerized emergency braking
City Safety is an auto brake technology that assists in reducing or avoiding traffic accidents at speeds up to in vehicles using City Safety Generation I. Later models using City Safety Generation II can stop at .

Βικιπαίδεια

Head restraint

Head restraints (also called headrests) are an automotive safety feature, attached or integrated into the top of each seat to limit the rearward movement of the adult occupant's head, relative to the torso, in a collision — to prevent or mitigate whiplash or injury to the cervical vertebrae. Since their mandatory introduction in some countries beginning in the late 1960s, head restraints have prevented or mitigated thousands of serious injuries.

A patent for an automobile "headrest" was granted to Benjamin Katz, a resident of Oakland, California, in 1921. Additional patents for such devices were issued in 1930 and in 1950, and subsequently. The major U. K. supplier of head restraints, Karobes, filed patents in the late 1950s and was still competitive in 1973 when British tests evaluated the quality of these devices.

Optional head restraints began appearing on North American cars in the mid-1960s, and were mandated by the U.S. National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA) in all new cars sold in the U.S. after January 1, 1969. The U.S. regulation, called Federal Motor Vehicle Safety Standard 202, requires that head restraints meet one of the following two standards of performance, design, and construction:

  • During a forward acceleration of at least 8g on the seat supporting structure, the rearward angular displacement of the head reference line shall be limited to 45° from the torso reference line, or
  • Head restraints must be at least 700 mm (27.6 in) above the seating reference point in their highest position and not deflect more than 100 mm (3.9 in) under a 372 N⋅m (3,292 in⋅lbf) moment. The lateral width of the head restraint, measured at a point either 65 mm (2.56 in) below the top of the head restraint or 635 mm (25.0 in) above the seating reference point must be not less than 254 mm (10.0 in) for use with bench seats and 171 mm (6.73 in) for use with individual seats. The head restraint must withstand an increasing rearward load until there is a failure of the seat or seat back, or until a load of 890 N (200 lbf) is applied.

An evaluation performed by NHTSA in 1982 on passenger cars found that "integral" head restraints—a seat back extending high enough to meet the 27.5 in (698.5 mm) height requirement—reduces injury by 17 percent, while adjustable head restraints, attached to the seat back by one or more sliding metal shafts, reduce injury by 10 percent. NHTSA has said this difference may be due to adjustable restraints being improperly positioned.

Παραδείγματα από το σώμα κειμένου για HEADREST
1. It‘s the one with "Obama ‘08/President" on the headrest.
2. My head is pushed back against the headrest of the small, hard seat, nausea wells in my stomach.
3. People want to know if it comes with a headrest, air conditioning and somewhere to hold your Costa coffee.
4. The fatal explosion, the paper said, came from an explosive charge that had been planted in the headrest of the car Mughniyah was driving.
5. His head had been tied to the headrest of the car following his death, Mr Baughan said, and he was found by passers–by.