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AmSafe Marks 10-year Milestone
发布时间:2016-02-16        浏览次数:313        返回列表

PHOENIX (April 5, 2011) -“ Ten years ago, a commercial flight from Glasgow, Scotland to Dublin, Ireland took to the skies, becoming the first airplane to be equipped with the AmSafe Seatbelt Airbag. In the decade that has followed, nearly 70 airlines and thousands of private aircraft owners have recognized the safety benefit of the seatbelt airbag. Today, more than 60,000 commercial and general aviation aircraft seats are equipped with this innovative technology and new seats are added daily.

-œSince that first flight a decade ago, we have supported nearly 70 airlines in their adoption of our enhanced safety technology. In addition, general aviation aircraft manufacturers have provided the seatbelt airbag as standard equipment on most piston-powered platforms, with no prodding from regulators, due entirely to the benefits it offers their customers,- said Terence Lyons, chief executive officer of AmSafe Global Holdings, Inc. -œMost importantly, we have met personally with a number of people who walked away from airplane crashes following the deployment of our airbags. The journey from an initial concept to a product that saves lives has been very fulfilling for everyone at AmSafe who has been involved with the seatbelt airbag over this past decade.-

In service since 2001, the seatbelt airbag has afforded airlines a value-added option for compliance with the FAA’s 16G safety regulation that went into effect in October 2009. The 16G rule requires commercial aircraft seats to withstand a crash impact of up to 16 times the force of gravity. As compliance with this regulation has proven challenging in certain seating environments, airlines have increasingly turned to the seatbelt airbag as a reliable means of meeting the new standard. In so doing, they have been able to deliver enhanced passenger safety and at the same time avoid taking the alternative approach to compliance: removal of rows of seats and sustaining an associated loss of millions of dollars per aircraft in revenue.