The Weekly Advertiser Horsham

Changes to ANCAP in 2018

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The body’s name remains the same, but the Australasi­an New Car Assessment Program, ANCAP, will, from the beginning of next year, implement the biggest raft of changes seen in the organisati­on since its formation in 1993.

New testing regimes, a new scoring system and a new way of marketing its ratings will all be introduced in 2018, as the organisati­on aligns its testing standards with those of Euro NCAP.

As well, ANCAP will now be part of the process to determine future safety protocols at a European level.

ANCAP chief executive James Goodwin said the business was reaching the end of what was known as the ANCAP Road Map.

“That will cease in December, and from January 1, 2018, the ANCAP Safety Riding Program will accelerate and we’ll adopt the common test and assessment protocols with our colleagues at Euro NCAP,” he said.

“It’s an important step in our evolution, and certainly, globally.

“This is the first time that two new car assessment programs have joined together to implement a common standard.”

The traditiona­l scoring system will be abolished, with the previous bestfrom-37 tally replaced with the Euro NCAP model of four ‘pillars’ of safety performanc­e.

These pillars include adult occupant protection, child occupant protection, pedestrian protection and safety assist system assessment.

Any car that is assessed under the new system will need to pass minimum requiremen­ts before it can be considered for the next pillar.

Testing protocols have also been ramped up, with ANCAP’S four testing sites revamped and improved, the return of the full-width frontal impact test, a 250kg increase in mass for the side impact test, a new and tougher pole impact test and the implementa­tion of new and improved crash test dummies – including female and new child-sized versions.

Mr Goodwin suggested the child protection protocol was one of the biggest changes to ANCAP’S brief.

“This will be the first time in Australia that we’ve looked at the vehicle’s ability to protect the younger occupants in the vehicle,” he said. “That’s a really important element.” The new safety assist systems testing regime is also set to be comprehens­ive, with ANCAP planning to put robot-controlled cars through a barrage of 100 different tests at South Australia’s Tailem Bend driver training facility.

Test cars will be piloted remotely to keep car speeds consistent across the assessment, while the tests themselves will look at all driver assist elements including city, highway and so-called ‘vulnerable road user’ autonomous emergency braking, lane departure and rear cross-traffic alert.

The vulnerable road users tests will see adult-sized, child-sized and cyclist-sized dummies sent across the front of the vehicle.

“The test scenarios that will form part of our assessment­s will be conducted at city speeds, at highway speeds, against stationary vehicle targets, moving targets, braking targets, in the daytime and in the night time. So this is a major investment,” Mr Goodwin said.

ANCAP will also date-stamp each new assessment with the year of the test, and will remove a car from the ratings list if it remains unchanged for six years.

“If there is no change to that vehicle, then the rating becomes a non-current rating,” Mr Goodwin said. “That vehicle is no longer rated.”

He added car-makers could avoid this by presenting an updated car ahead of the six-year deadline.

ANCAP will also be an active member of a board headed by Euro NCAP that creates test protocols, as well as contributi­ng data from Tailem Bend driver assistance systems assessment­s for incorporat­ion into Euro NCAP data.

A new corporate logo, a cleaner star rating graphic and a new smartphone app were also rolled out, which featured several crash-tested vehicles.

“So, really, what does all this mean for consumers, in the future?” Mr Goodwin asked rhetorical­ly. “What that means, hopefully, is that we’re going to get safer cars, and we’ll get safer cars on the road. If we raise the bar, the industry is going to raise the bar, as well.”

 ??  ?? SAFE BET: ANCAP is set to implement the biggest raft of changes seen in the organisati­on since its formation in 1993.
SAFE BET: ANCAP is set to implement the biggest raft of changes seen in the organisati­on since its formation in 1993.

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