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March 2005 >03/06/05
Accident Reconstruction
News Article
Small Cars Test Poorly
for Side Impact
By Dee-Ann Durbin, Associated Press Writer
Dodge Neon, Ford Focus and VW New Beetle Among Small Cars Getting
Lowest Side-Impact Rating
DETROIT (AP) -- The Dodge Neon, Ford Focus and Volkswagen
New Beetle are among the small cars that got the lowest safety rating in
new side-impact crash tests performed by the insurance industry, according
to results released Sunday.
Eleven of the 13 cars tested earned a "poor," the
lowest of four ratings, the Insurance Institute for Highway Safety said.
The Chevrolet Cobalt and the Toyota Corolla earned the second-highest rating
of "acceptable," but only when they were tested with their optional
side air bags. They earned "poor" ratings without the air bags.
Other vehicles that earned a "poor" rating were
the Hyundai Elantra, Kia Spectra, Mazda 3, Mitsubishi Lancer, Nissan Sentra,
Saturn Ion, Suzuki Forenza and Suzuki Aerio.
The institute's test simulates a severe crash. A barrier designed
to resemble the front of a pickup or sport utility vehicle hits the side
of the vehicle at 31 mph. A "poor" rating means a high chance
of serious injury in a similar crash.
Four of the vehicles tested -- the Elantra, New Beetle, Forenza
and Spectra -- have standard, head-protecting side air bags. But the institute's
chief operating officer, Adrian Lund, said the cars had poor structure that
failed to prevent injuries to the torso and pelvis.
Several of the vehicles offer optional side air bags, but
the institute will only test those vehicles without side air bags unless
the manufacturer provides a second vehicle with the option installed.
Toyota Motor Co. provided the Corolla with side air bags and
General Motors Corp. provided the Cobalt and Saturn Ion. But even when it
was tested with its optional side air bags, the Ion got a "poor"
rating because the institute said it didn't adequately protect the driver's
lower body.
GM said in a statement that the Cobalt and Ion meet or exceed
all federal vehicle safety standards and got higher ratings in the institute's
frontal crash tests.
The institute was most critical of the Neon, saying the car
performed so poorly that the driver likely wouldn't have survived the crash.
DaimlerChrysler AG defended the Neon, saying it meets federal safety standards
and its performance is similar to other small cars.
"No single test can determine a vehicle's overall safety
performance or how the vehicle will perform in a specific crash," DaimlerChrysler
said in a statement.
Lund said the ratings were similar to frontal crash test ratings
for small cars in 1997. Since then, manufacturers have redesigned those
cars and now most get the highest safety rating in frontal crash tests.
"As manufacturers redesign their vehicles, we expect
that small cars will get better in the side-impact test too," Lund
said.
Insurance Institute for Highway Safety, http://www.iihs.org
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