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June 8, 2004
Bell's Response
to the July 2004 Consumer Reports
Helmet Test
The July 2004 issue
of Consumer Reports magazine included
a review of bicycle helmets. Their
review notes that "several helmets
failed our tests because the buckle
broke - a recurring problem with bike
helmets we've noticed for years."
One of the three helmets that "failed"
the CR test was the Bell Influx (the
other two were the Specialized "Telluride"
and the Trek "Little Dipper").
Consumer Reports admits "we can't
pinpoint the cause of the problems;
other helmets that use those same
buckles passed our tests."
This document outlines
the position of Bell Sports on this
issue:
1. Bell Sports
believes that improper testing techniques,
not faulty buckles, are the cause
of the Consumer Reports "failures".
2. Bell Sports
has attempted to work with Consumer
Reports to understand what is causing
the buckles to break in their testing.
Following the June 1997 CR helmet
test that discovered similar buckle
issues, two senior members of the
Bell Sports staff went to visit Consumer
Reports and observed the testing of
helmets. CR tested many helmets in
front of Bell staff members and used
correct protocol. As such, they experienced
no failures of Bell helmet buckles.
Our theory is that in prior testing
CR allowed the simulated jawbone (steel
rollers or stirrups) to contact the
buckles prior to the test, which every
lab tech knows will cause failures.
The human jaw is not made of steel,
so the retention test is not considered
realistic if the steel stirrups break
the buckle. CR is not a helmet test
lab; they continue to break buckles,
yet deny improper testing procedures.
3. The helmet testing
community is aware that improper protocol
can lead to broken buckles. In
fact the ASTM bicycle helmet standard
was modified in 2001 to prevent improper
testing techniques that can cause
buckle breakage. The wording of the
ASTM retention test section, which
is otherwise identical to the CPSC
retention test, includes the following
instructions: "The retention
system fastening system shall be aligned
with the stirrup assembly so that
no part of the retention system fastening
system shall contact the stirrup assembly
prior to release of the drop mass."
4. Thousands of
the buckle type used on the Bell Influx
are tested by professional labs each
year; no design or manufacturing flaw
has ever been found. The buckle
manufacturer (an ISO 9000 certified
factory) tests between 20,000 - 30,000
helmet buckles a year. The US federal
government, which regulates the "federal
standard" referred to in the
CR piece, has never had an issue with
Bell helmets or the buckles that we
use. Our lab in Santa Cruz, CA conducts
approximately 1,000 retention tests
a year.
5. Most of the
helmets sold in the US use the same
buckle that we do, because it works.
However, if you test it incorrectly
-- like CR did with the Bell Influx,
the Specialized Telluride, and the
Trek Little Dipper -- you can get
a "test artifact" that appears
to be a failure, but is not. The US
government agrees with Bell, while
CR refuses the assistance of helmet
testing professionals.
6. We stand behind
the quality of the Bell Influx.
The Bell Influx that CR "failed"
has been certified in our Santa Cruz
lab, by the British Standards Institute,
by Imtest Laboratories in Australia,
by the University of Tennessee Test
Lab, and by HKS Laboratories in China.
None of these labs has failed the
Bell Influx in any test. Not once.
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