Seems to be a lot of opinion, a lot of adhering to scare stories propagated by certain helmet manufacturers, but not a lot of fact.
Mind you, you did ask for opinions.
I agree. Thermoplastic resin helmets tend to shrug this kind of impact off very well, unlike fibreglass or mixed-fibre RP shells. It's the way they're designed.Originally Posted by beanz
Fibre-reinforced plastics are generally designed to absorb the impact to a certain extent (without disintegrating) with the shell, then residual impact with the polysyrene liner, and the rest with the soft 'comfort' liner.
When thermoplastic shelled helmets were first introduced in the 70s (anyone remember the Polstar?), there was a lot of controversy about the fact that compared to fibreglass shells, they tended to remain intact on impact, so absorbed less of the initial impact. I'm sure some of this negativity was from companies who produced fibreglass helmets and were economically threatened by the cheaper and less vulnerable (to knocks and drops) injection-moulded newcomers.
Bonez, your helmet should be fine, but if you want total piece of mind, just replace it to remove any nagging doubts you may have. As others have said, it's only $200.







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This is what you must do..submit your helmet to the DSIR helmet testing department, you will find them in the Yelllow pages under ''testing division" they certify helmets to NZ1894 CE 12 accreditation, It will only cost $30 Cheaper than a new helmet even at $200. First they will carry out an ultrasonic Xray test this will show any errant hairline fractures. next they will stress test the shell using a compression tester, next an ultraviolet infra scan this checks for exteria delamination fibrosis.(fishures that might later cause problems. and finally to make sure you are safe the helmet is placed in a sim. Jig dummy head and a steel bolt is fired from 1 m at a force of 600kg point impact ( you can wear the helmet with confidence after this test)




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