Limits of Current Standards
Current equestrian helmet testing standards assess only linear impacts — that is, impacts perpendicular to the surface. In reality, however, accidents frequently involve oblique impacts, such as when a rider strikes the ground with a horizontal velocity component. Certimoov has incorporated this type of oblique impact into its testing protocols in order to better reflect real-world accident conditions.
To this day, the European standard still relies on an acceptance criterion based on acceleration measured using a rigid headform. This type of device does not accurately reproduce the behavior of the human brain and remains poorly representative of its true tolerance limits to impact. Certimoov, by contrast, uses a more advanced instrumented headform combined with a mathematical model of brain behavior developed from the analysis of several hundred real-world accidents. This approach enables biomechanical engineers and Certimoov to apply more realistic injury criteria, aligned with the brain’s actual tolerance to impact.
Finally, while current standards rely on a binary pass/fail acceptance criterion — a helmet is either compliant or non-compliant — Certimoov introduces greater nuance through a graded evaluation system, with scores ranging from 0 to 5.