Toronto Star

Asian, European cars take top spots for safety in 2015

- CHARLES FLEMING

Asian and European cars have taken top honours from the Insurance Institute for Highway Safety (IIHS).

Winners in categories for small cars, mid-size cars, luxury cars, SUVs and minivans included Acura, BMW, Honda, Infiniti, Lexus, Mazda, Mercedes-Benz, Mitsubishi, Subaru, Toyota and Volvo.

Oh, and Chrysler. The lone American marque in IIHS’s Top Safety Pick+ category for 2015 vehicles was the Chrysler 200.

Vehicles winning slots in the Top Safety Pick+ category had to score very high on crash tests and be equipped with forward collision warning and auto braking systems that help prevent forward collisions. Not all 2015 vehicles include this relatively new technology.

For its annual survey of safest cars for the upcoming year, the IIHS tests vehicles for their ability to protect passengers in five areas — a small overlap front test, a moderate over- lap front test, side strength, roof strength and head restraints. In a small overlap test, a vehicle is driven at 64.4 km/h into a rigid, five-foottall barrier. In a moderate overlap test, a vehicle is driven at that speed into a semi-rigid, two-foot-tall barrier. Vehicles can qualify to be Top Safety Picks only if they score as good or acceptable in the small overlap front test and good in all four other test categories.

An increasing number of car buyers take crash test safety results serious- ly, said Kelley Blue Book senior analyst Karl Brauer. So do car companies.

“There is a segment of car buyers who are very hot on this, and won’t purchase a car without checking its crash tests scores,” Brauer said. “For that subset of buyer, it’s critical to have good scores. As a result, car companies tout their scores in advertisin­g.”

Car companies are also responding more quickly to low scores, Brauer said. Manufactur­ers that score poor- ly on crash test safety standards are quicker to make design and manufactur­ing changes to improve their results.

After the IIHS introduced its moderate overlap front crash test in 1995, it took seven years before more cars were able to pass it, said IIHS President Adrian Lund.

Manufactur­er response time to the small overlap crash test, introduced in 2012, is about half that, Lund said, which makes cars, in general, safer to operate.

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