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Aussie student re-invents police motorcycle helmet

ChasCS

New member
Hopefully this will eventually be a common part of helmet features...

Aussie student re-invents police motorcycle helmet, adds 'RoboCop' features

A real-life RoboCop is one step closer to reality thanks to 23-year-old UNSW design student Alfred Boyadgis.


Boyadgis has designed a high-tech helmet for motorcycle officers that displays information in the visor and combines a number of vital technologies that are currently only available at arm's length.

The helmet is designed to improve response times in emergencies and save lives. It has already attracted interest from the Chief of Police in Coral Gables in the US state of Florida, who wants to test it in the field and sees potential for tactic response deployment as well.

Mr Boyadgis says he is also in talks with the NSW Police Traffic and Highway Patrol Command

"The way that helmets are designed at the moment is quite archaic," Mr Boyadgis said. "There's no direct electronics in there and, if you think about it, everyone has a smartphone, and all the luxuries of smart technology aren't with riders. They're still using strap-on GPSs and they have no ability to communicate with each other in a safe manner with something that's integrated."

Named Forcite, his helmet includes a "heads-up" display that shows critical information in front of the wearer's eyes, delivers turn-by-turn GPS by voice, and links to the automatic number-plate recognition system used by police, which identifies vehicle registration details and checks if there are any infringements.

Mr Boyadgis is currently doing honours in industrial design at the University of NSW. He designed a prototype of the Forcite for his major work last year.

It was featured at UNSW's LuminoCITY design exhibition in November and is now on display at the Red Dot Design Museum in Singapore as part of the Red Dot Design Awards, where it has been shortlisted into the top 30 out of 300,000 entries. The winners will be announced in October.

The design is also in the running for the James Dyson Award, which celebrates ingenuity, creativity and sustainable engineering.

He said he designed the helmet after talking with officers who complained about a number of issues, including strain to the back of the neck as a result of "constantly looking into cars from their helmet", he said.

"Their communications systems were hard and complicated to use under emergency scenarios - and they didn't have enough channels to properly control the scenarios which were happening inside city tunnels and places where there's not much frequency.

"So the ultimate solution was to combine all of these things into the helmet."

'RoboCop' in the 1987 American science fiction action film directed by Paul Verhoeven.
Once Mr Boyadgis commercialises the Forcite — he estimates he will need about $1.5 million to do so — he says it could be sold for about $790, which he said is about $100 more than the high-range premium Japanese-made Shoei helmets. Those helmets, he said, don't offer any of the technology features his Forcite helmet does.

"It's probably about a year off from being an actual, viable prototype," Mr Boyadgis said.

Dennis Weiner, the Chief of Police in Coral Gables, told Fairfax Media in an email that he was interested in field testing the helmet.

"As designed, this helmet offers significant additional capabilities to the motor officer. Besides improved radio communications delivery, it also provides for two-way flow of data between the communications centre and the officer."

He added: "The video capture is a great benefit for situational awareness for the command element in terms of understanding the officer's resource requirements, as well as monitoring officer safety issues. We could also see an application of this design for tactical unit use."

The improved field of vision should also help with the comfort issues currently experienced by officers wearing full-face helmets, Mr Weiner added.

NSW Police Traffic and Highway Patrol was also interested, Mr Boyadgis said. The agency was contacted for comment but hadn't responded at the time of publication.


This type of technology is becoming much more affordable. Looks more promising every time.
Is it necessary for us!

Chas
 

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Seriously, Coral Gables would be a heck of a test for it. Those guys could use anything to make their job safer and easier.

PK
 
Forcite helmet

The technology applied here is brilliant. As an observation though, a faceless policeman in a tinted lens helmet would be very intimidating when a moment of compassion may be needed in an emergency. Eye to eye contact can be reassuring. On the other hand a storm trooper appearance can be quite fear inducing. Again, just an observation.
 
:shocked: But if you raise the visor, the displayed info is all gone! :gaah:
the technology has outpaced the ergonomic studies...
 
Really..!!!

Coral Gables..!! They do have a helmet out now with this tech stuff for about $1,500. :thumbup:
 
How true...

Yeah, that's right too.
I had totally forgotten about that old style with the heads up display in the visor. ;-)

Did they ever get the weight issue resolved? Hahaha, the wind drag...


Chas
 

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Coral Gables..!! They do have a helmet out now with this tech stuff for about $1,500. :thumbup:

I think we both realize you don't need to go to many blocks and it gets ugly fast. Overtown is not that far and along with a few other destinations...

Anything to let these guys work safer makes sense to me.

PK
 
I love the huge visor! I mean id buy one, without the technology just to have that huge visor so i can see everything!
 
Hopefully this will eventually be a common part of helmet features...

Aussie student re-invents police motorcycle helmet, adds 'RoboCop' features

A real-life RoboCop is one step closer to reality thanks to 23-year-old UNSW design student Alfred Boyadgis.


Boyadgis has designed a high-tech helmet for motorcycle officers that displays information in the visor and combines a number of vital technologies that are currently only available at arm's length.

The helmet is designed to improve response times in emergencies and save lives. It has already attracted interest from the Chief of Police in Coral Gables in the US state of Florida, who wants to test it in the field and sees potential for tactic response deployment as well.

Mr Boyadgis says he is also in talks with the NSW Police Traffic and Highway Patrol Command

"The way that helmets are designed at the moment is quite archaic," Mr Boyadgis said. "There's no direct electronics in there and, if you think about it, everyone has a smartphone, and all the luxuries of smart technology aren't with riders. They're still using strap-on GPSs and they have no ability to communicate with each other in a safe manner with something that's integrated."

Named Forcite, his helmet includes a "heads-up" display that shows critical information in front of the wearer's eyes, delivers turn-by-turn GPS by voice, and links to the automatic number-plate recognition system used by police, which identifies vehicle registration details and checks if there are any infringements.

Mr Boyadgis is currently doing honours in industrial design at the University of NSW. He designed a prototype of the Forcite for his major work last year.

It was featured at UNSW's LuminoCITY design exhibition in November and is now on display at the Red Dot Design Museum in Singapore as part of the Red Dot Design Awards, where it has been shortlisted into the top 30 out of 300,000 entries. The winners will be announced in October.

The design is also in the running for the James Dyson Award, which celebrates ingenuity, creativity and sustainable engineering.

He said he designed the helmet after talking with officers who complained about a number of issues, including strain to the back of the neck as a result of "constantly looking into cars from their helmet", he said.

"Their communications systems were hard and complicated to use under emergency scenarios - and they didn't have enough channels to properly control the scenarios which were happening inside city tunnels and places where there's not much frequency.

"So the ultimate solution was to combine all of these things into the helmet."

'RoboCop' in the 1987 American science fiction action film directed by Paul Verhoeven.
Once Mr Boyadgis commercialises the Forcite — he estimates he will need about $1.5 million to do so — he says it could be sold for about $790, which he said is about $100 more than the high-range premium Japanese-made Shoei helmets. Those helmets, he said, don't offer any of the technology features his Forcite helmet does.

"It's probably about a year off from being an actual, viable prototype," Mr Boyadgis said.

Dennis Weiner, the Chief of Police in Coral Gables, told Fairfax Media in an email that he was interested in field testing the helmet.

"As designed, this helmet offers significant additional capabilities to the motor officer. Besides improved radio communications delivery, it also provides for two-way flow of data between the communications centre and the officer."

He added: "The video capture is a great benefit for situational awareness for the command element in terms of understanding the officer's resource requirements, as well as monitoring officer safety issues. We could also see an application of this design for tactical unit use."

The improved field of vision should also help with the comfort issues currently experienced by officers wearing full-face helmets, Mr Weiner added.

NSW Police Traffic and Highway Patrol was also interested, Mr Boyadgis said. The agency was contacted for comment but hadn't responded at the time of publication.


This type of technology is becoming much more affordable. Looks more promising every time.
Is if necessary for us!

Chas

I like It, I hope it has good air movement inside. That what I like on my HJC, that I can control it.

Mike
 
has everyone already forgotten about the Skully Helmet? granted they are the $1500-$25000 (original prototype) price range...
 
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