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The Insurance Institute for Highway Safety (IIHS) is one of the most
trusted sources of information when it comes to car and driving safety.
Now, this group is saying that after doing some tests, they were able
to find out that just how a car’s bumper works (or does not work) to
keep a vehicle safe during fender benders. The group did test
midsized vehicles and had 17 units to work with. Among that number,
only three units did do well. These three vehicles are the Mitsubishi
Galant, the Mazda6, and the Toyota Camry. They have been able to take
in around $1500 worth of damage or even less during each crash test
that the IIHS did. The other vehicles that the IIHS tested had bumpers
which did not quite work well. After the tests, they estimated that the
other vehicles took home damages that are around $4,500 to a whopping
$9000. Adrian Lund is the president of the IIHS and on these
tests and studies, he shares, “Our tests measure how well bumpers
protect cars from damage in everyday bumps. The whole purpose of
bumpers is to keep damage away from headlights, hoods, and other parts
that are expensive to repair, but this purpose was accomplished in only
2 of the 68 tests we conducted. In the rest, what we found is that
bumpers aren't up to the job.” Looking deeper into the situation,
it is then quite a reality when insurance companies are saying that
they have been able to send out more than $6 billion per year on claims
for damages during front crashes and rear impacts. Sure, if a bumper
does not work well, rear and front impact crashes could actually mean
much damage to your Chevy body parts and even to yourself if things to
even worse. Lund does further express, “We don't want the
automakers to change bumper heights just to get good performance in our
tests. We want car bumpers to resist damage in real crashes with other
cars as well as with higher-riding SUVs and pickups, so we revamped our
tests to reflect such crashes. In particular, we want to encourage
automakers to use bumpers with energy-absorbing bars that extend
farther into vehicle corners to reduce damage to headlights and other
critical and costly equipment. We want car bumpers that are taller so
they engage the bumpers on SUVs and pickups instead of underriding
them.”
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