A new series of crash tests by the
Insurance Institute for Highway Safety (IIHS) revealed troubling results
for minivans that are often perceived as some of the safest vehicles on
the road.
One crash test in particular was described by a lead executive at IIHS as "one of the worst crash tests we've ever seen."
"A person experiencing this would be
lucky to ever walk normally again," said Dave Zuby, Executive Vice
President of the Insurance institute. "The corner of the driver's door
was pushed in two feet during the crash. As a result, the floor and
instrument panel pinned the dummy into its seat. We had to remove the
seat to cut the dummy out of the vehicle."
Zuby added that IIHS engineers had to use a crow bar to free the dummy's right foot.
When asked about the
crash test results and comments from IIHS, Nissan spokesman Steve Yeager
said, "Nissan will continue to review these and other results from IIHS
testing as we seek opportunities for improvements."
Yeager points out the Quest has
received good ratings from the IIHS for other crash tests including
front moderate overlap and side impact tests.
The latest crash tests
check how minivans handled small overlap collisions where the front
corner of a vehicle hits another vehicle of an object like a tree or
street light.
Odyssey shines, Sienna acceptable
Of the five minivans crashed by the Insurance Institute, just two received positive reviews.
The Honda Odyssey did the best, receiving a "good" ratingwhile IIHS rated the Toyota Sienna as acceptable.
"It's not encouraging
that just 40 percent of the minivans did acceptable or better in these
tests. Especially when you consider how many people drive these
vehicles," said Zuby.
The Odyssey and Sienna are both top safety picks by IIHS.
Two other models, the
Dodge Caravan and Chrysler Town and Country were rated as "Poor" by the
Insurance Institute, though Zuby said those models did not do as poorly
as the Quest.
Small overlap tests nearly complete
Minivans are the latest segment of vehicles to go through small overlap crash tests with the Insurance Institute.
Over the last two years,
IIHS has put dozens of different vehicles through similar collisions,
seeing how different models react when the driver's side front corner
hits another vehicle or object at 40 miles.
It is one of the most common and potentially deadly accident scenarios facing drivers.
While Zuby had scathing remarks about the Quest, he would not comment on how passengers elsewhere in the minivan would have handled a similar accident.
"We did not see how children sitting in the second or third row would have been impacted by this crash," he said.
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