Skip to main content

Aussie demonstration for BG

A live crash demonstration of the Highway Care (HC) manufactured BarrierGuard 800 portable steel safety barrier was staged recently at Eastern Creek Raceway in Sydney, Australia. Organised by the Boylan Group, Highway Care International’s (HCI) partner, and Australia’s largest equipment hire company, Coates Hire, the event drew 200 Australian engineers, designers and road industry professionals and showcased technology already established throughout Europe.
June 18, 2012 Read time: 2 mins
A safety demonstration was carried out in Australia of up-to-date barrier products
A live crash demonstration of the 1529 Highway Care (HC) manufactured BarrierGuard 800 portable steel safety barrier was staged recently at Eastern Creek Raceway in Sydney, Australia.

Organised by the Boylan Group, Highway Care International’s (HCI) partner, and Australia’s largest equipment hire company, Coates Hire, the event drew 200 Australian engineers, designers and road industry professionals and showcased technology already established throughout Europe.

Racing car driver Matt Sofi, a Formula 3 competitor and defensive driving instructor, drove the test vehicle into the barrier at 80km/h at an angle of 15°. Knowing the potentially jarring forces unleashed when a vehicle impacts with an inanimate object at high speed, Sofi was said by HCI to have approached the staged crash demonstration with a fair degree of caution.

“I was surprised because, with the initial hit, it didn’t bounce you off into another lane,” Sofi said. “The car was still straight and in a position where you could stop in a controlled manner and in addition damage to the car and the barrier was confined to just a few scratches.”

Motorcycle Council of New South Wales chairman Chris Burns was another said to have been impressed with the barrier’s safety capabilities. He described it as the most “motorcycle friendly” he had seen.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Video evidence
    July 19, 2012
    A man in Leeds has been described by the authorities as the UK city's most stupid criminal, after posting 80 videos on the Internet involving a range of vehicle-related offences. One of the video clips showed the man recording the speed of a vehicle in which he was a passenger. It hit speeds of over 224km/h (140mph), double the maximum allowable speed limit on the UK's fastest roads. The man also recorded clips of the car in which he was a passenger when racing other vehicles, driving away from a petrol fil
  • Jet propelled
    April 16, 2015
    A motorcyclist in the western province of Rajasthan in India had a rather unwelcome surprise when he was knocked from his motorcycle, suffering injuries in the process. The cause of his mishap was somewhat out of the ordinary as the man had been struck by a part from an Indian Air Force MiG-27 fighter bomber as it crashed into a field nearby.
  • Intermat 2009 promises to be bigger than before
    July 4, 2012
    For 2009, the Intermat exhibition will prove a major event on the off-highway equipment calendar This year's Intermat construction equipment exhibition in Paris promises a great deal for the visitor. The show will feature a total surface area of 180,000m² including 30,000m² of outside demonstration areas and this represents 7% more space than for the previous exhibition in 2006. Some 1,320 companies are exhibiting and come from 43 countries, with 64% of exhibitors coming from outside France. Around 209,032
  • Boral and Global Ecofuel enter the biofuel and bitumen arena
    May 9, 2019
    An Australian government agency has awarded around US$350,000 to two companies to investigate the production of bitumen and diesel from wood waste. If successful, Australia’s state of New South Wales could become home to the world’s first biorefinery turning sawmill residues into renewable bitumen and diesel, according to ARENA - the Australian Renewable Energy Agency. Under the $842,000 million study, Boral Timber, a major supplier of hardwood and softwood in Australia, will explore the technical and