The Signal

Meet the $34K fender bender

Increasing technology drives up cost of repairs

- Eric D. Lawrence Detroit Free Press |

Many new vehicles these days come loaded with all kinds of extras, including safety features that should help you avoid a crash. ❚ Automatic emergency braking, blind-spot detection, forwardcol­lision warning – the list goes on. ❚ Advanced safety features have helped reduce fatalities for those behind the wheel and their passengers, and features that help vehicles avoid pedestrian­s have the potential to cut into the dramatic increase in pedestrian fatalities in recent years. ❚ But what happens when these evermore technologi­cally advanced vehicles crash? Experts say the cost to repair all that technology can be hefty.

John Van Alstyne, CEO and president of I-Car, a nonprofit focused on vehicle repair education, recently provided a jaw-dropping figure during an appearance on Autoline, an industry-focused program, to repair a “left front corner hit” on a Kia K900: $34,000.

“The Kia K900, for example, has a ton of technology around the front and the corners of that vehicle,” Van Alstyne told host John McElroy, who sounded, not surprising­ly, stunned by the figure to repair a luxury sedan that lists for about $51,000.

A Kia spokesman did not respond to requests for comment on the repair figure.

While other experts cautioned to be careful of focusing too much on that particular figure because of the wide array of variables involved in a vehicle collision and repair, it’s clear more technology can add to the cost of repair.

In its 2018 “Crash Course” industry trends publicatio­n, CCC, which provides vehicle repair cost estimate services, made that case, noting a 2 percent increase in average repair costs from 2016 to 2017 to $2,927 on top of a steady trend of yearly increases beginning in 2010.

“Growth in electronic vehicle content – items added to address vehicle safety or convenienc­e – also add to the overall cost and complexity of repair and the need to understand (automaker) recommende­d repair procedures,” according to the publicatio­n. Not only are more parts needed, but additional labor is required for resetting, calibratin­g and scanning operations, it said.

“The average it takes to fix a car is going up,” said Dan Young, vice president of sales and marketing for AsTech, a Plano, Texas-based company that provides vehicle scanning and diagnostic services. “There’s just so many systems that are being installed on these vehicles that operate in the modules and sensors.”

Advanced driver-assistance systems, for instance, may employ radar, cameras and other technologi­es. With most automakers pledging to make automatic emergency braking systems standard on new cars by 2022, the complexity inside most vehicles will expand.

“Minor fender benders now damage sensitive safety components located in bumpers, side mirrors and fenders, increasing the number of vehicles needing sensor calibratio­n and repair,” according to informatio­n supplied by Young.

He noted that the technology is expanding beyond luxury vehicles.

“It’s a dramatic shift change in the speed with which this advanced driver-assistance system technology is being placed on high-production, low-cost vehicles,” Young said. “This type of technology is going to help someone avoid accidents, (which) is great, and it’s going to reduce the frequency once enough of these cars get into the mainstream, but at the same time, once these cars do get involved in a collision, that’s where, I think, the challenge is from a severity standpoint.”

Expanding use of materials such as high-strength steel, as well as design changes to better safeguard occupants during a crash, such as crumple zones, can also complicate the repair process.

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GETTY IMAGES

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