The National Highway Traffic Safety Administration announced Tuesday changes it will form to its current crash-test rating system. that is the star rating that must be posted on every car sticker, and which is routinely referred to in commercials and other advertising. The changes ??? to be issued for model year 2010 and beyond ??? are in response to the former tests being ???too easy,??? with 97% of vehicles scoring four or five stars out of five.
The new checking procedures include a lot of improvements while retaining the star rating system. According to Cars.com senior editor Joe Wiesenfelder, one of the greatest faults with the current system is that even though a side-impact crash pop quiz measures head injuries ??? which are common and potentially fatal ??? that info isn???t figured into the star rating, which paints a picture than might be brighter than reality. According to NHTSA spokesman Jay Tyson, the new system will take that into explanation.
Side crash-worthiness will consist of the current sled tryout, measuring the affect from another moving car, as well as a new analysis that simulates collisions with a fixed thing ??? a pole. Tyson said the inclusion of the new tryout was not due to any specific statistic pointing to injuries caused by such collisions, but rather that the analysis itself, coupled with the standard sled analysis, would lead to the
The tests will plus be conducted using an array of new crash-test dummies that simulate more occupant sizes, particularly smaller drivers. The tests will plus take into history damage to more parts of the body, including the legs.
All in all, there will now be four scores for consumers to sift through on a car???s sticker:
- An overall score, called ???Combined Crashworthiness Rating.???
- Front crash test
- Side crash test
- Rollover crash test
Each analysis is weighted differently to accomplish the combined score, with the front score worth 5/12 of the combined score, the side score worth 1/3 and the rollover score worth 1/4.
NHTSA will try to highlight the combined score as the one consumers should pay the most attention to when researching a car purchase.
No rear crash tryout will be added, like the one the Insurance Institute for Highway Safety conducts. Instead, NHTSA says it will direct consumers to IIHS??? website to find more info.
We???ll have to wait and see how the tests degree up to the ones conducted by IIHS, but overall, the new tests do sound like an improvement.
Original post by David Thomas













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