MCN

Why helmets have just got a whole lot safer

How a ‘MIPS’ helmet liner can cut the likelihood of brain injuries dramatical­ly

- By Jordan Gibbons SENIOR REPORTER

‘It can reduce the force to the brain by 40%’ GREG SHAPLEIGH, MIPS

This year’s EICMA motorcycle show was full of new innovation­s, including plenty of new helmets many of which featured a ‘MIPS liner’ but what on earth is that? We found out.

“The origins go back to the 1990s, to a neurosurge­on who was finding more people on his operating table with brain injuries even though they were wearing helmets,” says Greg Shapleigh, MIPS Board Member. “Realising helmets obviously weren’t doing all that they could, he decided to do something about it. Working with various researcher­s his ideas lead to the ‘slip plane’ and an idea we now call ‘MIPS’.”

So what exactly is MIPS technology? MIPS stands for ‘Multi-directiona­l Impact Protection System’ and in its simplest form, is a ‘slip plane’ that allows your head to move inside a helmet in the event of an impact. How does it help? It’s all to do with how your head hits the ground (or other objects) when you crash.

Most helmet tests involve assessing the reduction of energy transfer to sensors within the helmet by striking the helmet against a fixed object at 90 degrees. This is great at testing the ability of a helmet in preventing skull fractures, however the likelihood of whacking something head-on is actually quite low; you’re much more likely to come in at an angle with a glancing blow, which is where slip plane technology comes into effect.

When you strike an object at an angle, a rotational force is sent through the helmet and straight to your brain. These oblique impacts subject the soft tissue of the brain to shearing forces, which is what does the damage. The MIPS slip plane allows your head to move between 10-15mm in any direction at the point of impact, which can reduce the force transmitte­d to the brain by up to 40%.

But wait, doesn’t your scalp or neck do the same job?

“If you think about an accident taking place over a few seconds the part that really matters to your brain is the first seven to ten millisecon­ds,” explains Shapleigh.

“In that first moment of impact the rider, helmet, and velocity combined causes a point load that’s enough to seize your head and neck completely solid, whereas the MIPS slip plane can still move under that load and within that tiny impact window.”

 ??  ?? Greg Shapleigh reveals to MCN the benefits of ‘MIPS’
Greg Shapleigh reveals to MCN the benefits of ‘MIPS’

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