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By Dee-Ann Durbin, Associated Press Writer
WASHINGTON (AP) -- The difference in bumper
height between cars and sport utility vehicles leads to costly accident
repairs even after low-speed crashes, an insurance group said Sunday.
Ford Motor Co. vehicles had the lowest repair costs
in 10 mph crash tests because their bumpers were most compatible,
the Insurance Institute for Highway Safety said. Vehicles from Volvo
and DaimlerChrysler AG had the highest repair costs.
The institute wanted to find out what happens
when an SUV hit a car from behind and when a car hit an SUV from
behind.
The organization tested five pairs of 2004 and 2005
vehicles, each from the same company: Ford's Taurus sedan and Explorer
SUV; Chevrolet's Malibu sedan and TrailBlazer SUV; DaimlerChrysler's
Dodge Stratus and Jeep Grand Cherokee; Nissan's Altima sedan and
Murano SUV; and Volvo's S40 sedan and XC90 SUV.
"We thought that, at a minimum, automakers should
be paying attention to the compatibility of the bumpers across their
own fleets," said Adrian Lund, the institute's chief operating
officer.
Lund said on some vehicles, such as the Dodge Stratus
and the Jeep Grand Cherokee, the bumpers passed each other by.
Ford had the lowest repair cost of $1,256 after the
Explorer hit the Taurus -- $555 in parts and labor for the Taurus
and $701 for the Explorer. Ford also had the lowest repair cost
of $2,608 when the test was reversed and the Taurus hit the Explorer.
It cost $6,080 to repair the Volvos after the S40
hit the XC90 and $6,129 after the Jeep Grand Cherokee hit the Dodge
Stratus. The Nissan vehicles sustained more than $5,000 in damage
in both types of crashes, while the Chevrolet vehicles had more
than $4,000 in damage in both crashes.
Lund said there was far more damage, including broken
radiators and major leaks that would require the vehicles to be
towed, than most people would expect in a 10 mph crash. He also
said it was striking that cars could inflict so much damage on SUVs.
Car bumpers line up reasonably well because federal
standards require them to extend from 16 inches to 20 inches from
the ground. But no such requirements exist for SUVs, minivans or
pickup trucks, so they often have flimsier bumpers or no bumpers
at all, Lund said.
Automakers have promised improvements. Last year,
the Alliance of Automobile Manufacturers, a Washington trade group
that represents 10 automakers, announced a voluntary agreement to
improve compatibility between vehicles by 2009.
Insurance Institute for Highway Safety: http://www.iihs.org
Alliance of Automobile Manufacturers: www.autoalliance.org
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