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April 2005 > 04/28/05
Accident Reconstruction
News Article
Saab 9-5, 9-3 Hatchback Rated as 'Safest Cars' in Swedish
Road Accident Study
DETROIT, April 28 /PRNewswire/ -- The Saab 9-5 and
Saab 9-3 hatchback are rated as the safest cars in Sweden following the
latest road accident study conducted by Folksam, the country's leading insurance
company.
The Folksam report, "How Safe is Your Car?", updated
every two years, features findings based on an assessment of personal injuries
suffered in real-life accidents on Swedish roads. In winning Folksam's safest
car award, the Saab 9-5 and 9-3 hatchback were honored for scoring the lowest
injury risk rating of 138 different car models in the study.
The findings are based on an analysis of 94,100 car-to-car
road accidents in Sweden since 1994 involving injuries to 35,400 occupants.
An injury risk measurement is produced for each car model on which there
is sufficient data available, including a wide variety of German, Japanese
and other Swedish car brands.
Apart from winning Folksam's overall award, the 1998-2005
Saab 9-5 and 1998-2003 Saab 9-3 hatchback each topped their own respective
categories, for large and medium-sized cars. The Saab 9-5 also won Folksam's
safest car award two years ago.
Both models have been developed according to Saab's "Real-Life
Safety" philosophy, which involves computer simulations and crash testing
designed to replicate what happens in real collisions on real roads. These
are derived from detailed analysis of actual accidents involving Saab cars
on Swedish roads. The Saab database now covers more than 6,100 real-world
collisions.
"This latest Folksam report is further independent confirmation
of the effectiveness of our long-term work with car safety," emphasized
Per Lenhoff, manager of Crash Safety Development at Saab Automobile.
Saab cars are also highly rated in studies and tests carried
out in the United States by the Insurance Institute for Highway Safety (IIHS)
and the Highway Loss Data Institute (HLDI). Based on top results in separate
frontal and side impact crash tests, the 2004 Saab 9-3 Sport Sedan earned
a "Double Best Pick" designation from IIHS, the first passenger
car to achieve this distinction. In a 2004 HLDI study covering model years
2001-2003, the Saab 9- 5 sedan topped the luxury midsize category for relative
frequency of injury insurance claims.
As a further affirmation of Saab's safety achievements, the
2003 Saab 9-3 Sport Sedan, 2004 9-3 Convertible and 2003 Saab 9-5 have each
earned five stars, the highest rating possible, in the European New Car
Assessment Program's (EuroNCAP) frontal and side-impact crash tests. EuroNCAP,
Europe's leading crash-test agency, conducts tests on European model variants
using three types of collisions: a frontal offset barrier impact and two
different kinds of side impacts. The test results are then evaluated according
to a large number of parameters relating to driver and passenger safety.
Lenhoff notes that a vehicle's safety performance is the product
of many factors, including driver and occupant behavior, personal judgment
and other variables. The design of the car also influences its real-life
safety integrity. "Real-Life Safety" means that Saab's goal is
to develop cars that provide safety in real-world crashes.
Saab is a division of General Motors Corp. Saab Cars USA is
the distributor of Saab 9-2X, 9-3 and 9-5 vehicles for Saab Automobile AB,
Sweden. For more information, please visit http://www.saabusa.com .
Source: Saab
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