Setting
the safety criteria
Soon
afterwards, research in America established the medical criteria
needed to prevent brain injuries in falls. The crucial factor
was found to be deceleration. If the deceleration of
a child’s head as it struck the ground could be limited to
50 g (fifty times the force of gravity), permanent brain
injury was very unlikely. This became the basis of new
British and then European Standards for impact-absorbing playground
surfacing.
From
then on the performance required of a playground surface was
clear. It must have just the right elastic properties, neither
too soft nor too hard, to maintain deceleration below 50 g.
And it must be thick enough to go on deforming progressively
until the child’s head was safely brought to rest.
Achieving
the performance was relatively easy. But the considerable
thickness of resilient material required under high play equipment
– typically 150 mm for a fall height of 3 m – made
the first products very expensive.
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