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‘In cycling, you had to choose between performance and safety’ – Van Rysel announces a new airbag-equipped aero skinsuit
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Van Rysel has unveiled its own fully integrated airbag skinsuit today. This announcement follows the Aerobag Airbag technology that was announced in early January, as well as the UCI’s opening of a consultation process for the technology in late February.
Van Rysel claims there have been 1300 fractures in the last six years in professional cycling competition (source unknown), and the 2026 pro cycling injury list already makes for a sobering read. Injury rates are high in pro cycling with minimal safety protection for riders.
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Van Rysel says its airbag skinsuit is fully functional and that it is ‘in final validation with professional riders ahead of potential race deployment.’ While we do not expect to see it rolled out for Paris-Roubaix this weekend, due to the UCI consultation process being ongoing, it’s another indication that airbag technology may not be far away for racers.
Van Rysel’s airbag tech has been developed with In&motion, a US-based firm specialising in airbag technology for motorbike, equestrian, and snow sports.
The CEO of In&motion, Remi Thomas, explained, “The strength of our technology lies in the scale and quality of the data we have accumulated over the years, with hundreds of millions of kilometres captured across high-intensity environments such as MotoGP and ski-racing. This dataset fuels machine learning algorithms capable of analysing rider dynamics in real time.”
The Van Rysel Airbag system is powered by an algorithm “trained on 450 million kilometres of data,” likely from the motorbike world and which analyses rider dynamics up to 1000 times a second to help identify when a rider is crashing.
Deploying in a claimed 60 milliseconds, the suit has a claimed target weight of 700 grams, with 500 grams of this weight being the airbag system.
The Airbag focuses on three body areas: the central core, cervical zone and spinal line. Focusing protection on the thorax and rib cage, neck and back, though the brand says more zones may be explored over time.
The brand’s press material doesn’t go into technical specifics, but looking at the In&motion website, its system appears to use inflatable airbag units, inflated with a ‘gas generator’ – likely some kind of cartridge – with the system being operated by a control unit.
Van Rysel says it aims to make the technology available for anyone to purchase within the next two years, and whilst a skinsuit product is more race-specific, the fact that another company is investing in airbag technology for cyclists indicates that we aren’t a million miles away from some real advancements in safer cycling kit and equipment for cyclists.
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