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HANS device co-inventor Dr. Robert Hubbard dies

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The co-inventor of the head and neck supporting HANS device, Dr Robert Hubbard has passed away at the age of 75.

As Autosport reports

, the device was developed by Hubbard and race car driver Jim Downing in the early 1980s to prevent race track fatalities caused by basilar skull fractures. These happened due to insufficient head restraints even in relatively minor shunts, including the fatal 1981 accident of

Renault

works driver Patrick Jacquemart, a friend of Downing. A patent for the device was first filed in 1985, and Downing wore a prototype at the final IMSA race of the 1986 season in Daytona.

Dr. Robert Hubbard, co-inventor of HANS Device, passes away

The finalized device was first marketed in 1991. Later, the developers got big U.S. automakers such as

General Motors

and

Ford

onboard, and the tragic losses of Ayrton Senna and Roland Ratzenberger in Formula 1 in 1994 led to more interest from F1 officials towards HANS; F1 ended up adopting the device in 2003. A chilling addition to the HANS saga is that the death of Dale Earnhardt boosted HANS sales from a mere 250 to 3,000 in 2001.

However, it’s not just top tier racing such as F1 that benefits from the use of the device: it’s a welcome addition to non-professional track days as well, and everything in between. HANS devices built by Simpson range from under $500 to a little over $1,000, and as life

insurances

come, that is a pretty palatable expense.

Related Video:

from Autoblog http://bit.ly/2UMMNLY