Meredith, L.Clarke, E.Fitzharris, M.Baldock, M.Hurren, C.Brown, J.2017-10-162017-10-162016Proceedings of the 2016 Australasian Road Safety Conference, 2016, pp.1-6http://hdl.handle.net/2440/108580Motorcycle protective clothing has been well established as an effective means of preventing abrasion injuries to motorcycle riders involved in crashes, yet the performance of this clothing can be variable. The European Standard for motorcycle protective clothing assesses the abrasion resistance quality of motorcycle protective clothing using tightly specified equipment. The absolute time required to abrade a material is reliant on the specifications of the abrasion machine, and it is unknown if measurements taken on machines with different specifications can provide useful information. This study examined the abrasion resistance of materials tested on two different machines built to slightly different specifications. These results confirm machines of different specifications can produce comparable results, and demonstrate capacity to use a non-standard machine to examine comparative performance of materials.enCopyright: Authors retain copyright of submissions presented at the Australasian College of Road Safety Conferences. We would ask, however, that the conference is referenced wherever the published submission is posted, including online, and that there is a link to this webpage on the ACRS website.Motorcycles, Protective clothing, Abrasion machineComparative performance of the Cambridge abrasion machine in different laboratoriesConference paper0030064848289492Baldock, M. [0000-0003-0689-1388]