Automotive

The bus cabin should be as ergonomic as the office workplace

5th March 2021
Lanna Deamer
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Professional drivers are at a higher risk of developing musculoskeletal pain due to prolonged sitting, vibration, awkward posture and repetitive actions. Here, Kostas Poulios, Principal Design & Development Engineer at Pailton Engineering, examines the situation from the vehicle design stage, and argues for the importance of fully adjustable driver workstations.

Drivers are in the cabin for eight hours a day. The bus is their workspace, and operators are beginning to see the importance of creating a workspace that the driver can be proud of. The entire vehicle cabin should be, and can be, as ergonomic and adjustable as the conventional office workplace.

In an office space, it is already well appreciated that ensuring an employee’s workstation is comfortable will enable better work and healthier staff in the long term, but for drivers of commercial vehicles, such considerations have been lacking. Until recently, an adjustable seat, mirrors and steering column was as far as adjustment went.

However, data has shown this isn’t sufficient. Depending on the person’s size and height, certain gauges could be left out of comfortable eyeline, or the driver may strain to reach controls and switches. Over time, recurring strain to check speed, tyre pressure and other driving data could result in long-term musculoskeletal disorders.

In August 2020, a metanalysis study collated the findings of 56 studies across 23 countries on driver health. Data of a total pooled population of 18,882 professional drivers was analysed for musculoskeletal pain. The prevalence of such pain ranged between 43.1% and 93%.

The office cab concept counteracts this issue. Rather than considering the steering column and dashboard as two separate entities, where the steering column is adjustable and the dashboard is fixed, they work in conjunction with each other. By building a full dashboard assembly, the entire dashboard is adjustable in both the tilt and telescope direction. When the driver adjusts the steering wheel, the dashboard follows that adjustment, ensuring the driver can reach all the switches and see all the gauges without strain.

This paradigm has changed the engineering requirements of steering columns. Going forward, as more vehicle Original Equipment Manufacturers (OEMs) follow suit, the interface between the steering column and the dashboard will likely require bespoke design, as catalogue steering parts may not interface the dashboard correctly. For Pailton Engineering, an engineering business that has a unique market position offering bespoke, non-standard design, this trend is exactly its forte.

Yet for commercial vehicle operators, the thought of fully adjusting the entire cabin environment, including seat, mirrors, steering column and dashboard, for every driver on every shift, may sound too time consuming and costly. They may question the long term health and safety benefits of ensuring every driver is in the optimal driving position, compared with the time and energy expended on these recurring adjustments.

Luckily for the concerned fleet managers, new automation is making this higher level of cabin adjustment easier and faster. Pailton Engineering is developing an electric memory steering column for commercial vehicles, based on technology nurtured in the automotive sector. The technology, in collaboration with Continental and seat manufacturer Isri, has made the entire cab environment adjustable with the touch of a button.

Most impressive is the memory feature of this technology. A driver can scan their key fob upon entry, and the steering column, dashboard, mirrors and seat will adjust to the driver’s pre-recorded ideal position. This removes the human error of a driver adjusting a pneumatic column to where they ‘think’ is correct. This technology improves driver ergonomics without the hassle of manual adjustment.

While the link between professional driving and musculoskeletal pain is well researched and proven, it doesn’t mean the industry cannot do something about it. With novel design concepts, such as the driver workstation, OEMs can build workplaces for drivers to be proud of.

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