Invisible Bicycle Helmet: Where Safety Meets Fashion

In Sweden, wearing a bicycle helmet is optional for adults—and most adults opt not to wear one.
Invisible Bicycle Helmet: Where Safety Meets Fashion
Hovding, the invisible bike helmet in black. Showing the airbag in the activated position. Hoding, Sweden
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<a href="https://www.theepochtimes.com/assets/uploads/2015/07/invisiblehelmet.jpg"><img class="size-large wp-image-285458" title="A colorful shell for the invisible airbag bicycle helmet, sold at a store in Gothenburg, Sweden (Barbro Plogander/The Epoch Times)" src="https://www.theepochtimes.com/assets/uploads/2015/07/invisiblehelmet-599x450.jpg" alt="A colorful shell for the invisible airbag bicycle helmet, sold at a store in Gothenburg, Sweden (Barbro Plogander/The Epoch Times)" width="590" height="443"/></a>
A colorful shell for the invisible airbag bicycle helmet, sold at a store in Gothenburg, Sweden (Barbro Plogander/The Epoch Times)

<a href="https://www.theepochtimes.com/assets/uploads/2015/07/original_ro-dam_airbag.jpg"><img class="wp-image-285459" title="Hovding, the invisible bike helmet in black. Showing the airbag in the activated position. (Hoding, Sweden)" src="https://www.theepochtimes.com/assets/uploads/2015/07/original_ro-dam_airbag-338x450.jpg" alt="Hovding, the invisible bike helmet in black. Showing the airbag in the activated position. (Hoding, Sweden)" width="309" height="413"/></a>
Hovding, the invisible bike helmet in black. Showing the airbag in the activated position. (Hoding, Sweden)

The women wanted to know right away if it was at all possible to manufacture an airbag bicycle helmet, so they called an airbag company, which affirmed their idea.

Before the project was to be completed, they had managed most of the basic research about the airbag, and had even applied for a patent.

“It’s a collar made out of fabric that hangs around your neck. Inside is an airbag that inflates in case of an accident. Because your body moves differently during an accident than when you’re just riding along, the airbag senses this, and inflates,” Haupt explains.

Recently, Swedish insurance company Folksam tested the helmets. Approved helmets must pass a test where they are dropped on asphalt with a force that is equal to an accident at 15 miles per hour. That is considered a straight blow to the head.

“The invisible helmet was outstanding in this test, compared to other helmets,” said Maria Klyfft of Folksam.

What Folksam could not test was the rotational force against the head that occurs when something hits it from the side.

Since the invisible helmet construction is completely new, Folksam does not know how to conduct such a test. Klyfft thinks such a test is necessary, because many head injuries begin with a rotation of the head.

“When you fall down on the asphalt at an angle, the outer bag gets caught in the asphalt, but the head does not necessarily rotate in the same way as the outer bag,” she said, and added, “That would be very good news for the brain.”

The reason for this beneficial effect is that ordinary helmets are inflexible, while the invisible helmet has an outer and an inner bag, which are not connected.

This high-tech head-protector weighs in at just below 1.5 pounds, and the weight is on the rider’s back. Since people lean forward when they ride, they will not sense the weight, Haupt said.

The invisible helmet is also a potential fashion item. The company that the two inventors have started will cooperate with different designers, to make all kinds of shells that will be adapted to different climates and environments. Their aspiration is to “set the trends, not follow them.”

The invisible bicycle helmet has already won several awards, among them the Index: Award—known as the Nobel Prize of design, says Haupt with pride.

The invisible helmet is only available so far in stores in Sweden, Denmark, and Norway and online for 3,998 Swedish krona (about $600) from Hovding Sverige AB.

The Hovding, as it’s called, can only be used once. After the airbag is triggered it should be returned for recycling (in exchange for a discount on a next purchase). The company will also examine the collar’s black box, which records 10 seconds of data just before and during a biking accident.

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