T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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1383.1 | | CHEST::WATSON | As simple as possible, not simpler | Thu Mar 14 1991 16:14 | 8 |
| Stephen,
I'm glad your OK. Vauxhall do seem to make pretty safe cars, a
friend of mine crashed her Nova on the A33 recently. It go a lot
shorter but the passenger cell was intact ! Amazing for such a small
car.
Rik
|
1383.2 | Another | NEWOA::KERRELL | Dave Kerrell NEW B1/2-2 774 6185 | Thu Mar 14 1991 17:13 | 3 |
| When I had an Astra GTE I was hit by a Volvo and survived.
/Dave :-)
|
1383.3 | Safety tests | DOOZER::JENKINS | Comic relief. Laugh I nearly | Thu Mar 14 1991 18:13 | 15 |
|
� accident in..... apparently Astras are the third safest cars on the
� road after big Volvos and Saabs.
Not according to tests carried out by ADAC (German AA) and the UK Road
Research Laboratory.
The 1,2,3 was BMW, Mercedes, Volvo, Below this not one car tested
rated better than "occupants likely to suffer serious injury" at
30 mph offset frontal impact, and a large number including some
expensive hardware were rated "likely death".
Not a nice thought.
|
1383.4 | | COMICS::FISCHER | Tonight I fancy myself | Fri Mar 15 1991 08:40 | 8 |
| On top gear a while ago, a German magazine crash tested a number of
cars and found Saab to be the safest in it's class. In the small car range
the Vauxhall Nova (Opel whatever) was safest. Volvo didn't do particularly
well.
Ian
|
1383.5 | | WOTVAX::MEAKINS | Clive Meakins | Fri Mar 15 1991 09:01 | 10 |
| I've also seen mention of the Fiesta being the safest car in it's
class. These views do vary, as the angle of impact is vital. The
tests where BMW came out top were trying to simulate hitting a tree
with the drivers side of the front of the car. There were comments
that some of the cars in the tests were built for full frontal impacts
only.
Then of course we get into side impacts, I guess the safest vehicle is
really hard to access. Vehicles I would not want to be in a prang in is
probably easier define.
|
1383.6 | Red rag to a bull ;-) | WARNUT::SMITHC | one careful owner, low mileage !! | Fri Mar 15 1991 11:16 | 5 |
| re:last
Bit of a rat-hole, but go on then, Clive !
Colin
|
1383.7 | Just one example, light blue touchpaper and retire... | WOTVAX::MEAKINS | Clive Meakins | Fri Mar 15 1991 12:02 | 20 |
| > Bit of a rat-hole, but go on then, Clive !
Ok, if you insist. Accidents I have seen and disscusions I've had with
a friend who a traffic cop (if that's not a contradiction in terms!)
leave me with the impression that the Peugeot 205 is not very sturdy.
Terms like, "disintegrate on impact" come to mind. It may be that
there are other cars as bad, or worse - but the 205 is a very popular
car in Europe, so a lot of people could be affected. I'm told it
couldn't get through US crash regs, but can't substantiate this (most
cars need mods, but these weren't viable).
Significant damage from comparatively minor accidents is actually
desirable as long as the saftey cell isn't damaged - the crumple zones
absort the impact.
A car can be light and strong, though it no doubt requires less effort
to to design a heavy strong car. My concerns are not necessarily with
hot hatch versions, as the German tests show, a 30 mph accident can
easily prove fatal.
|
1383.8 | It's called "buiding an image" | NCEIS1::CHEVAUX | Patrick Chevaux, Nice, 828-6995 | Fri Mar 15 1991 13:38 | 11 |
| .3� Not according to tests carried out by ADAC (German AA) and the UK Road
.3� Research Laboratory.
In another test done by German T�V sponsored by a local auto magazine
(discussed somewhere else in this conference) the swedish cars did not
score very well either. The Volvo 7XX is basically too rigid (all g's
are realyed to the passengers) and the SAAB (using the common
FIAT Croma/LANCIA Thema/ALFA 164/SAAB design) is disastrous.
Safety is one thing, advertisement is another. A Volvo/SAAB is probably
safe when parked.
|
1383.9 | Experience helps..... | CHEFS::CLEMENTSD | Public Sector and Telecomms | Fri Mar 15 1991 15:06 | 12 |
| ANY car is safe-ish when parked. It could still roll down hill and kill
someone if you left the handbrake insecure.....
As one who has survived a **BAD** shunt in a SAAB 900 and seen what
happened to the other car (a Mk II Granada) with my own vehicle driven
to the garage, my perception is that the SAAB is a car the I would
undoubtedly label as a car I would want to be in in a crash, given the
need to be in a car in a crash. I would prefer not to be in a car in a
crash........ but sometimes life gets out of the immediate control of
the combatants.
|
1383.10 | :^) | SHIPS::SAXBY_M | Smoke me a kipper... | Fri Mar 15 1991 15:12 | 6 |
| I remember seeing two BMWs (an M3 and a 5 series) have a front side
impact with each other and the drivers both hopped straight out, but
then again the way in which the M3 was being driven made the accident
inevitable, so does that make it safe or not?
Mark
|
1383.11 | | SUBURB::THOMASH | The Devon Dumpling | Mon Mar 18 1991 12:35 | 18 |
|
Well, after being rear-ended when we were doing about 15mpg, and the
other car about 60-70, I can say that our kitcar is much safer than
Orions.
The damage on our car was minor, and we could drive on our way. The fix
was a new vallence, some paint, and a new tyre. �1000 in total, of
which �500 was for the wheel and tyre.
The Orion was badly knocked about. The front was dented so badly, the
bonnet wouldn't close. There was lots of steam everywhere.
The rightside had buckled, so it was impossible to open the door on
the drivers side.
They were both much more shaken than us - and we had an open top with
no roll-bar!
�4000 repair bill and had to be towed away.
Heather
|
1383.12 | | SIEVAX::CORNE | Sometimes you get the Elevator, sometimes the Shaft | Mon Mar 18 1991 12:46 | 9 |
|
> Well, after being rear-ended when we were doing about 15mpg, and the
> other car about 60-70, I can say that our kitcar is much safer than
> Orions.
Safer, but not cheaper!!! 15 MPG indeed!
Jc ;-)
|
1383.13 | | SUBURB::THOMASH | The Devon Dumpling | Mon Mar 18 1991 12:49 | 10 |
|
>Safer, but not cheaper!!! 15 MPG indeed!
Opps, a slip of the fingers, however, 15MPG was about right when
taking the 3.5 V8 around the race track ............
Heather
|
1383.14 | | VESTA::WOOD | Scalpel, scissors, replace head ....... | Mon Mar 18 1991 13:51 | 7 |
|
Judging by what my brother did to my mums mk1 Astra recently, I would say
that it is a safe car. Still, I will feel safer when I get the full cage in my
car !!
Alan
~~~~~~
|
1383.15 | Astras are safe | STRIKR::LINDLEY | Strewth mate..... | Tue Mar 19 1991 10:51 | 10 |
| The Astra is, according to various reports I've seen, the "safest" car
in its class.
The sources that I can remember are Which? Magazine, Some TV prog (Top
Gear I think) and some German Magazine report.
John
PS Glad you are alright after the prang.
|
1383.16 | :^) | SHIPS::SAXBY_M | Smoke me a kipper... | Tue Mar 19 1991 10:52 | 4 |
|
What's safe about a car that crashes?
Mark
|
1383.17 | but VOLVO cheat ... | RUTILE::PARTRIDGE | | Fri Mar 22 1991 11:11 | 14 |
| I read in a mag that VOLVO have been cheating in their
ads in the States.
They showed a mega-truck driving over a line of various
cars flattening all of them except the VOLVO.
But during an investigation into the ad it was admitted
that the VOLVO had been strenghtened while the other
cars had been weakened. VOLVO deny they knew this.
Now it is suggested that an ad showing a stack of VOLVOs
which showed in UK was rigged with some supporting frame!
Makes you wonder what you can believe in ads, reports etc.
|
1383.18 | Rathole alert..... | CHEFS::CLEMENTSD | Public Sector and Telecomms | Fri Mar 22 1991 11:37 | 3 |
| You mean you believe ANYTHING in an ad? Sounds about as sensible as
trusting a politician......but then I'm know to be a mite cynical about
such things.
|
1383.19 | Whilst we're on the subject | KERNEL::SHELLEYR | RS with the RS | Fri Mar 22 1991 11:47 | 4 |
| What about the ad that has this BMW suspended on its door hinges.
Is that REALLY possible on a standard car ?
- Roy
|
1383.21 | | SUBURB::PARKER | LAST DAY! | Fri Mar 22 1991 14:47 | 18 |
| Re .19
Yes I believe this.
I also think that any car carefully suspended by all four doors would
resist failure as long as the BMW did.
Its back to the ads showing Volvos falling out of first floor windows;
the resistance to damage is no more than is required by law.
Much more interesting weas the German magazine which piled 8 Executive
type saloons into a conmcrete block, and saw who would have survived.
The Volvo driver would, but in less good nick (from memory)than the BMW
driver. The Fiat and Renault drivers needed discount on wooden boxes.
Typos excepted - not seeing too straight.
Steve
|
1383.22 | squash this !! | COMICS::MILLAR | No Porn please I'm Graphic | Fri Mar 22 1991 16:38 | 13 |
| Yep
The article I read stated that VOLVO (US) admitted to "staging" the
advert.
They fitted "cages" to the cars to avoid them being squashed by the
monster truck.
However another article said that the Volvo's were standard but the
other cars had their roof pillars partially cut so that they crumpled
nicely.
Who buys a car to let a "monster truck" drive over it anyway ??
|
1383.23 | Staged Re enactment | COMET::BARRIANO | choke me in the shallow water... | Fri Mar 22 1991 19:39 | 10 |
| RE Squashed Volvo
I believe the final outcome was that Volvo paid a fine to the Texas
(?) State Attorney-Generals Office and stopped running the ad.
The AD agency admitted to reenforcing the Volvo roof and cutting the
pillars on the other cars. The sad thing is, is that the inspiration for
the ad was an actual case at a Monster Truck show, where a Volvo did
stand up to being driven over. I guess a "staged" reenactment of an
event is hard to do honestly :-)
Barry
|