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Nils Bohlin
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It wasn’t the Crash Test Dummies who convinced a skeptical American public that the 3-point lap/shoulder safety belt was the safest way to go in automobiles. It was a video of a “crash cart” with an egg strapped in that made the case to the U. S. Consumer Product Safety Commission for Nils Bohlin, safety engineer for Volvo in Gottenberg, Sweden. For Bohlin knew when he came to America in 1968 to present his work that creating acceptance for his belt and, more importantly, for wearing it was as important as the design for the device itself.

Ten years before the egg cart demonstration, in 1958, Bohlin was recruited to Volvo by its then-president, Gunnar Engellau, with a mandate to make safety a principle selling point in the company’s cars. Coming from the aerospace industry, Bohlin had seen the stresses that a human body undergoes in high-speed crash situations, and he understood the limitations of restraint devices, particularly those that were cumbersome, uncomfortable and difficult to use. Following a year of extensive testing and re-engineering, his breakthrough came with the realization that both the upper and the lower body must be held securely in place with one strap across the chest and one across the hips, with the joint for the two belts located just next to the occupant’s hip. It was an elegant solution, so simple that a person could buckle-up with just one hand and be comfortable in the process.


Kurzweil Reading Machine
3-Point Seat Belt
Laser Surgery
Implantable Defibrillator
Ceramic Substrate For Catalytic Converters
Aspirin
ENIAC Data Translating Device
Bessemer Steel Process




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