Originally Posted by
JosephG
Maybe you can fill in some blanks for me on MIPS then; I'm having trouble finding more than reference articles talking about it and the pretty videos, but not quite enough on what it does. I get the concept, the low friction interior allows for shift, replicating the way things happen inside your skull. The info in the videos looks like it does an excellent job for motorcycle and other tight fitting helmets.
What doesn't make as much sense to me is how it works in a helmet which already is a bit looser. I can't find any information on that. Something sitting on top of your head with just one strap, even pulled tightly, is going to have more movement than I've seen represented so far. So is it benefiting in this scenario? Do the helmets with MIPS by Scott and the like simply have the patented design included, or do they have additional tests for these configurations? If anyone has a link that covers this, I'd love to see it. If the low friction layer is allowing for rotation to absorb some impact, that would only work if the inner layer is secure enough that the impact force would move the outer layer but not the inner layer; otherwise, it does nothing.
I'm all for safety, my brain is what pays the bills after all, but I just want to make sure what I'm paying for is founded in practical use, not pure theoretical that wouldn't match what would happen on the road. Which is what annoys me about some other certifications out there.
POC, Scott and others license MIPS technology
It is proven in bicycle helmets to reduce certain types of impacts pretty dramatically.
There was a large article about it in Bicycling a while back.