Skip to main content

The Blade is cutting edge in truck mounted attenuator technology

The Blade truck-mounted attenuator from the Verdegro Group has met the highest safety level - Manual for Assessing Safety Hardware. The AASHTO Manual for Assessing Safety Hardware (MASH) is the new set of regulations for crash-testing of safety hardware devices that are destined for use on the US National Highway System. It updates and replaces the 20-year old NCHRP Report 350. Verdegro also said that the Blade TMA was also nominated for the 2017 ATSSA innovation award, which took place just after World Hig
April 18, 2017 Read time: 2 mins
The Blade stands up to MASH safety standards
The Blade truck-mounted attenuator from the Verdegro Group has met the highest safety level - Manual for Assessing Safety Hardware. The AASHTO Manual for Assessing Safety Hardware (MASH) is the new set of regulations for crash-testing of safety hardware devices that are destined for use on the US National Highway System. It updates and replaces the 20-year old NCHRP Report 350.


8617 Verdegro also said that the Blade TMA was also nominated for the 2017 ATSSA innovation award, which took place just after 3260 World Highways went to press. The 2466 American Traffic Safety Services Association represents the road safety, traffic safety and highway safety industry in the US through legislative advocacy, traffic control safety training and member partnerships.

The MASH safety changes are mainly necessitated by alterations made to vehicles over the past decade. Cars have greatly increased in size, so updated regulations are required to keep occupants safe. For example, the average bumper height on light trucks has risen considerably since 1993, so previous highway safety designs are inadequate.

The new MASH standard sets stricter criteria for truck-mounted attenuators. Bigger and heavier and newer test vehicles must be used during testing. Upper and lower truck weight has to be tested, ballast has to be fixed, and also the arrow board together with the TMA construction must have to be tested. Additionally, offset and offset angel tests are now required in MASH.

This patented BLADE TMA has been full-scale crash-tested according to MASH 2009/2016 at the 2347 Texas Transportation Institute facility. All the ride-down values were within the preferred values.

Verdegro, based in Munnikenheiweg, the Netherlands, said the BLADE TMA will be available for the US market from April.

Related Content

  • FMCSA criticised for not promoting significant truck safety improvements
    May 1, 2012
    American Trucking Associations president and CEO Bill Graves has praised the efforts of the nation's truck drivers, safety directors and law enforcement officers for their contribution to the continued progress in the industry's safety record. "Based on the latest report from the Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration (FMCSA), fatal crashes involving a large truck have fallen 31 per cent from 2007 to 2009 and crashes resulting in injury have fallen 30 per cent," Graves said following a review of FMCSA'
  • Solari gives Doha airport baggage truck drivers the VMS signal
    March 6, 2015
    VMS innovations offer transportation efficiency gains – David Arminas writes. Baggage truck drivers at the new Hamad International Airport in Doha, Qatar, are now getting real-time imformation and directions on variable message signage. The airport opened last April and will be the first touchdown point for fans attending the football World Cup in Qatar in 2022. The airport is only 4km away from the overused but now redundant Doha International Airport, which will be demolished and redeveloped as an urban p
  • IRF promotes education and career development for road industry entrants
    February 27, 2012
    The Fellowship Orientation and Executive Leadership Program of the Washington Program Center is now the IRF Road Scholar Program. It encompasses the ten-day Fellows' Orientation Program, the Executive Leadership workshop, and the brand new IRF career fair. This year, 25 students from 19 countries participated, bringing the 59-year-old program total to 1,180.
  • UN highlights safety pandemic on roads
    November 23, 2015
    Jean Todt, special envoy of UN secretary general on the challenge of road safety Jean Todt, president of, Fédération Internationale de l'Automobile (FIA) and special envoy of the UN secretary general on road safety spoke about the next steps in tackling the plague of road accidents. “Every year, on the world's roads, almost 1.3 million people die. According to the WHO (World Health Organization), road traffic crashes are now the eighth leading cause of death globally, and the leading cause of death am