Metal bars welded to the Ford F-150 Super Crew in front and behind its front wheels that helped it pass the Insurance Institute for Highway Safety's notoriously difficult small-overlap crash cost roughly $58, Automotive News is reporting.
It was revealed last week that the low-cost part was left off of regular- and extended-cab models, prompting the insurance organization to retest the F-150 models and revise their ratings much lower than the original test.
According to Automotive News, Ford stopped short of saying that it would include the low-cost parts on the regular- and extended-cab versions of the truck, but said it would install "countermeasures" to improve crash performance. The regular and extended cab comprise about 5 and 25 percent of overall F-150 sales respectively.
Ram has said it would include the bars, which engineers have dubbed "wheel blockers," in its pickups this year going forward.
The effectiveness of the relatively inexpensive part underscores the auto industry's evolution to the small-overlap crash, which has been incredibly difficult for automakers since it was introduced three years ago. In 2012, only 3 out of 11 midsize luxury or near-luxury cars received "good" or "acceptable" ratings on the crash. In 2015, many of those ratings had improved to "good," but when optional crash avoidance systems were installed on the car. For instance, the front crash mitigation package on the Mercedes-Benz C-Class, which scored a "good" rating when equipped with that option, costs $2,800.
Safety officials at the IIHS said they would begin testing the top two bestselling models of pickup trucks to avoid truckmakers testing only their most-popular models and applying the rating to the rest of its lineup without having the same equipment.
The post For $58 You May Pass the IIHS Small-overlap Crash appeared first on The Truth About Cars.
from The Truth About Cars http://ift.tt/Jh8LjA
Put the internet to work for you.
No comments:
Post a Comment