car parking sensor
The Safest
- By: B. SixWise
Every year, the Insurance Institute for Highway Safety (IIHS) rates passenger vehicles' ability to hold up in a crash as good, acceptable, marginal or poor. They break cars down into four size categories: large, midsize, small and minivans, and base their ratings on front, side and rear safety tests.
The vehicles that earn good ratings in each test category (front, side and rear) are given gold ratings, while those that earn good front and side ratings and acceptable rear ratings are given a silver rating.
Test results are only comparable among vehicles of similar weight, as larger vehicles are generally more protective than smaller ones.
IIHS Top Safety Picks for 2006
Large
GOLD: Ford Five Hundred with optional side airbags
GOLD: Mercury Montego with optional side airbags
SILVER: Audi A6
Midsize
GOLD: Saab 9-3
GOLD: Subaru Legacy
SILVER: Audi A3
SILVER: Audi A4
SILVER: Chevrolet Malibu with optional side airbags
SILVER: Volkswagen Jetta
SILVER: Volkswagen Passat
Small
GOLD: Honda Civic
Minivans
No vehicles earned a gold or silver rating, most because their seat/head restraints only earned marginal or poor ratings.
Least-Safe Vehicles of 2006
The following vehicles earned "poor" ratings on both the side and rear safety tests that the IIHS conducted.
Side impact tests measure how well a passenger is protected when a vehicle is hit in the side by an SUV or pickup.
The rear safety tests measure how well a seat/head restraint protects a passenger against neck injury in rear impacts at low to moderate speeds.
Hyundai Elantra
Kia Optima
Mazda6
Nissan Sentra
Suzuki Forenza
Toyota Corolla
Mazda MPV without optional side airbags
Note: The National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA) also conducts safety tests for frontal and side impacts (not rear). However, their rankings are based on a different scale (one to five stars) and test for different things than the IIHS tests. When the same two cars are compared using both IIHS ratings and NHTSA ratings, the ratings are often contradictory.
About the Author
This article was provided by the world's #1 most popular and trusted holistic living e-newsletter -- FREE to you right now at http//www.SixWise.com! The old way of thinking "holistic living" pertains only to personal health. The new way of thinking "holistic living" means prevention of the negative and adherence to the positive in all SIX practical areas of life relationships, finances, career, home environment, safety and health. With the http//SixWise.com e-newsletter, you will get holistic wisdom from the world's top experts in all six of these areas -- completely FREE with a simple sign-up (and a guaranteed no-spam policy!) at http//www.SixWise.com.