Ford Delayed Important Safety Device for Nearly 10 Years
Strategic Safety News, Volume 4, Issue 3, November/December 2001
Adjustable foot pedal controls allow short-statured drivers to increase
the distance between themselves and the air bag module, thereby lessening
chances of injury from an air bag deployment. Strategic Safety News reported
the use of these designs, their first application in 1970s era GM vehicles
and their more current application in 1999 model year Ford vehicles (SSN
Vol.1, Issue 4, and Vol. 2, Issue 3). Further investigation reveals that
these mechanical devices were offered to Ford and other vehicle manufacturers
more than 10 years ago; yet this relatively low-tech solution to reducing
injuries to short-statured drivers was not implemented until recently. Now
litigation in a case against Ford has uncovered new information about the
use and application of adjustable pedals and why they were not provided in
Ford air bag-equipped vehicles many years earlier during what is now known
as the "air bag crisis."
Studies of real world air bag collision incidents show that drivers whose
seats are in the forwardmost position are at highest risk of being severely
injured by the air bag. NHTSA Special Crash Investigation files show at least
20 restrained driver fatalities caused by air bags. The agency recommends
drivers maintain at least 10 inches between their chest and the air bag module
to reduce the risk of serious injury from a deployment. However, it is estimated
that approximately 5 percent of female drivers in the U.S. sit less than 10
inches from the air bag module. But these findings vary with car size, and
according to one study approximately 40 percent of short women in large and
midsize cars sat closer than 10 inches to the steering wheel compared with
27 percent in small cars. In a related study of 13 drivers who were 4' 8"
inches to5' 2", three of the 13 positioned themselves less than 10 inches
from the air bag module.
Ergonomic research has shown that adjustable pedals increase the distance
between a driver's chest and the air bag module by an average of three inches,
which can significantly reduce the chances of serious injury from an air
bag deployment. Adjustable pedals can also improve foot kinematics and reduce
foot/ankle injuries.
In 1994 Ford safety chief Robert Munson told Automotive News that if he
could improve only a couple of things (besides the driver) it would be seat
belts and foot pedals (SSN, Vol. 2, Issue 2). Munson said short drivers sit
too close to the air bag because they have to move the seat forward to reach
the pedals--"We need to tell people not to sit right on top of the air bag.
People don'trealize it's what you could call an `aggressive' device. . . .
You can suffer a very serious injury, even a fatality, if you're sitting too
close to an airbag when it goes off." His solution-adjustable pedals to allow
smaller drivers to maintain a greater distance between themselves and the
air bag module. At the time, Ford's ergonomics division predicted that 35
percent of the population would benefit from improved comfort and safety through
the use of adjustable pedals by moving shorter drivers away from the steering
wheel while making air bags more effective and less likely to cause injury.
Munson's statements in 1994 appeared to be alluding to Ford's upcoming application
of adjustable pedals; however, it took Ford another five years to include
these safety devices on production models despite having applications production
ready and tested.
Adjustable pedal designs date back to the 1950s and were first utilized
in production vehicles by GM in the 1970s. GM marketed its adjustable pedal
system as a comfort and convenience option that provided as much as four-inches
of adjustment range. While Ford did not offer a production version, it fitted
an early 1970s experimental safety vehicle with an adjustable pedal design
and fixed driver seat that accommodated 95th percentile male through 5th
percentile female drivers.The pedals were designed with eight inches of adjustment
and operated electrically.
Why didn't Ford and other manufacturers implement adjustable pedals to reduce
the hazards of air bags to small drivers when it was apparent that adjustable
pedals offered a solution to driver proximity to the air bag? Louisville,
Kentucky attorney Ron Hillerich recently asked that question of Thomas Robson,
former president of the supplier company that sells adjustable pedals to Ford
and other vehicle manufacturers. Hillerich represents the family of a small-statured
woman who, despite being belted, was fatally injured by the deployment of
the air bag in her 1997 Mercury Sable. Hillerich deposed Robson and learned
Ford was not only aware of the safety benefits of adjustable pedals, but
the company planned their introduction as early as 1990-a full nine years
before they were actually introduced. However, according to Robson, it was
Ford's purchasing department that brought the introduction of these safety
devices to a grinding halt because the supplier didn't fit within the company's
new consolidated purchasing scheme. The supplier, previously DeCouper Industries
and currently known as Teleflex, was deemed too small for Ford purchasing,
which was trying to pare down the number of suppliers. Despite attempts to
work an arrangement with Ford that included having the systems manufactured
by a large Ford supplier or through Ford's own in-house parts manufacturing,
DeCouper was stonewalled.
The saga began in January 1986 when at Ford's request several suppliers,
including DeCouper, were asked to participate in a design study for adjustable
pedals for 1990 model year vehicles. In June 1986, Ford asked suppliers to
stop work on the project due to concerns about feasibility because of the
new passive restraint requirements. Although the initial project was cut by
Ford,in 1989 Ford Advanced Vehicle Engineering Technology had DeCouper install
an adjustable pedal system on a Thunderbird. Meanwhile DeCouper continued
development of adjustable pedal designs and in 1990 actively promoted the
safety advantages of its patented system to Ford. DeCouper fitted a 1990 Lincoln
Continental and a 1988 Taurus wagon, which were used to demonstrate the system
to Ford. The company also sent information to key Ford planners, designers,
product engineers, the safety office, and purchasing, and held seminars for
Ford decision-makers. Ford responded that with "limited resources" they were
unable to pursue evenhigh priority ergonomic features. This was the beginning
of a long process in which DeCouper persistently presented Ford engineers,
executives, and safety people with information on their design; prototypes
were designed and tested; and Ford continued to encourage the supplier tomove
forward with its adjustable pedal system.
By 1991 DeCouper, already a Ford Q1 supplier, fitted an adjustable pedal
system in Ford's Contour concept car and completed 200,000 miles of testing
in GM and Ford vehicles over a 6-month period. In July of that year DeCouper
also provided Ford with time and cost estimates for production of adjustable
pedals. The company estimated 18 months was needed to provide a volume of
200,000 units or greater at a cost of $27 to $30, and prototype installations
could be completed in 8 to 12 weeks-this meant production could still be met
for 1993 and 1994 model year Ford vehicles. By October DeCouper offered Ford
exclusivity for their adjustable pedal design for the 1995 and 1996 model
years. The first Ford vehicles scheduled to receive the system were the Continental
and Taurus/Sable platforms, but Ford again deferred the programuntil the
1996/1997 model years. During the early 1990s, reports of air bag injuries
to drivers began to find their way into the news, and there was particular
concern for drivers who needed to sit close to the air bag module.
An April 1992 internal Ford memo shows that approval for pre-program funding
of adjustable pedals for 1996 and 1997 models was granted. The memo went on
to note that it was in Ford's best interest that purchasing work with DeCouper
to ensure the company remained a viable, profitable supplier. However, DeCouper
was not part of Ford purchasing department's long-term sourcing strategy,
which DeCouper president Tom Robson learned would create a roadblock. Robson
testified that "Ford purchasing had a real hard time with the fact that all
the engineers liked the product and were looking at opportunities to put
it in their vehicle. Ford Purchasing didn't have us in their long term plan.
. . . Ford purchasing had advised us they didn't believe that we could be
the supplier of adjustable pedals, even though engineering wanted this product
and even though the product was great. . . . We were not in the long term
plan for Ford Purchasing" As a result, the head of Ford's new products group
suggested that DeCouper offer incentives to the purchasing department in
order to get them to authorize a deal to get adjustable pedals in Ford vehicles.
Back and forth communications ensued between DeCouper and Ford purchasing
in which DeCouper was willing to meet Ford demands, including a joint venture
partnership with other suppliers who were part of Purchasing's plans and
an offer of exclusivity for Ford. None of these arrangements were able to
move Ford Purchasing off of their long-termplans of supplier consolidation.
Robson described the situation as "Ford Purchasing simply refused to change
its direction and allow any other division or any group within Ford to tell
themwhat they were going to do. . . . We agreed to sit down with Ford and
have them name a supplier who they would like us to work with. And we would
work with them on an exclusive arrangement of some sort, that we were wide
open for opportunities to continue the program bydealing with Ford Purchasing
in any way they wanted to deal with us. What we got in return was that they
wanted us to sell the company or give someone else the rights to our patents
withoutany remuneration. . . . We developed it. We designed it. We had proven
that we were a capable supplier but yet they wanted us to give it away." Robson
went on to state that "we're making adjustable pedals today in spite of Ford
telling us back in 1992 that we weren't capable of doing it."
DeCouper continued supplying prototypes for Ford in the early 1990s for
Taurus/Sable, Continental, Mustang, Explorer, and Bronco, and Ford authorized
preprogram funding to proceed with the implementation of adjustable pedals
on select luxury models. Ford noted that DeCouper's adjustable pedals "may
play an important role in the design of future interiors toallow optimum
occupant positioning for passive restraint effectiveness with disproportionate
drivers." By April 1993, Ford conditionally approved adjustable pedals for
the 1997 Expedition and 1998 Continental models, but by June Ford stopped
the progress again claiming "budgeting problems." Through the mid-1990s DeCouper
grew by acquisition and continued to supply standard brake and accelerator
pedal assemblies to Ford and other manufacturers as well as landing a contract
with Chrysler to provide adjustable pedals for the Dodge Viper. Later Ford
finally approved and followed through with an adjustable pedal program for
the Expedition/Navigator for the 1999 model year, which was the same design
the company waspromoting in the early 1990s.
Now that adjustable pedals have made their way into a number of Ford vehicles,
Ford marketing fails to mention their safety benefits and promotes the feature
as a comfort and convenience device. Adjustable pedals in Ford vehicles have
been so well received by consumers that Ford Brand Manager J.C. Collins stated
the company is "now going to put it [adjustable pedals] into as many vehicles
as we can." Arthur Redmond, Executive Director of Ford Global Consumer Insights
has said that "adjustable pedals were originally targeted at women but ended
upproviding a competitive advantage in the general market." Ford's competitive
advantage is quickly eroding as Chrysler, Toyota, and others have started
to use adjustable pedal designs.