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Some small trucks get dismal crash test ratings
07/24/2008
Side protection an issue; vehicle becoming more popular due to mileage
WASHINGTON
- The latest crash tests by the insurance industry raise safety
questions about small pickups, which are drawing more interest because
they get better mileage than larger trucks.
The Insurance
Institute for Highway Safety reported Thursday that several small
pickups from the 2008 model year offered dismal protection in side
crashes. Versions of the Chevrolet Colorado and its twin vehicle, the
GMC Canyon, without optional side air bags earned the institute’s
lowest rating of poor in the side test.
Several pickups were
judged marginal, the second-lowest in the four-scale ratings, in the
side tests: the Dodge Dakota and Mitsubishi Raider without optional
side air bags; the Ford Ranger; Mazda B-Series; and the Nissan Frontier
without side air bags. The Ranger and B-Series, which share the same
underpinnings, do not offer side air bags.
“More people may be
looking at small pickups because of rising gas prices,” said Adrian
Lund, the institute’s president. “Unfortunately, they won’t find many
that afford state-of-the-art crash protection.”
The 2008 Toyota
Tacoma was the only small pickup tested to merit the top score in side
crashes. The Tacoma was tested with optional side air bags because the
equipment will be standard on 2009 Tacoma pickups being shipped to
dealers this month, the institute said.
Nearly 9,000 motorists
died in side crashes in 2006, the second-most common after front-end
accidents. Side air bags have been credited with providing additional
protection. Automakers have said they will make the side air bags
standard across their fleets by the 2010 model year.
In front-end
crashes, the Tacoma, Dakota, Raider and Frontier received the top
score, or good; the Ranger, B-Series, Colorado and Canyon earned the
second-highest score, acceptable.
The institute noted that only a
few of the vehicles offer anti-rollover technology called electronic
stability control. Stability control is optional on the Tacoma and
Frontier and unavailable on the other vehicles tested. It will be
standard equipment on the Tacoma, Colorado and Canyon in 2009.
GM
spokeswoman Carolyn Markey said the automaker conducts more than 150
different types of crash tests on its vehicles and said the institute’s
test is “designed to simulate a very severe crash.” She said the
Colorado and Canyon have performed well in other consumer tests.
Chrysler
LLC spokesman Max Gates said the Dakota had received the highest rating
in every category of the government’s front-end and side tests. A
vehicle’s overall safety performance could not be determined by a
single test, he said.
Ford spokesman Wes Sherwood said the Ranger
was “very competitive” among small pickups and had performed well in
government crash tests.
Sales of some small pickups have fared
better than full-size trucks, which have seen their sales plummet
because of high fuel prices. The small pickups offer better fuel
economy ratings than large pickups. One version of the Tacoma, for
example, has combined fuel efficiency ratings of 22 miles per gallon
while versions of the Colorado got a combined 20 mpg, according to the
Environmental Protection Agency.
In the institute’s side test,
the vehicle’s side is struck by a barrier moving at 31 miles per hour.
The barrier simulates the front end of a pickup or sport utility
vehicle. In the government’s side-impact tests, a shorter, more
lightweight barrier strikes into the side of the vehicle at 38.5 mph.
MSNBC.com, Associated Press, http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/25823041