Subscribe

A few years ago, the Insurance Institute for Highway Safety (IIHS) discovered that its automatic emergency braking (AEB) test wasn’t really simulating real-world crashes. It had been testing the systems at relatively low speeds, far below the speeds where most rear-end crashes actually occurred. The IIHS decided to raise the speeds, and recent results reveal that these systems are getting better at working in most real-world scenarios.

Of the 29 vehicles tested, 21 earned IIHS’s Good or Acceptable rating. One earned a Marginal grade, while the remaining six received Poor ratings. That’s a big increase from the first batch of cars tested early last year. Only two earned a Good or Acceptable rating out of the 10 test vehicles.

Fast improvements in front crash prevention - IIHS News

The institute raised the test’s speeds from 12 and 25 miles per hour to 31, 37, and 43 after discovering that about half of nonfatal rear-end crashes occurred on roads with 35 to 45 mph limits. It also added two more crash targets, a motorcycle and a semi-truck, to the existing passenger car test.

Cars that earned IIHS’s Good rating came to a complete stop before impacting the passenger car target. Most also stopped for the motorcycle, but this remains a weak point for AEB systems, with “motorcycle tests the most common stumbling block,” according to the institute. For the semi-truck, the cars only needed to provide a timely warning of an impending collision, which many Good-rated cars also achieved.

Acceptable-rated models struggled with avoiding the motorcycle target at higher speeds. None of the Acceptable models prevented a collision with the motorcycle in the 43-mph test, with some impacting the target at over 25 mph. The Poor-rated vehicles struggled with both the passenger car, with most failing to slow enough in the 37-mph test, and every single one hit the motorcycle in the 31-mph run. However, the vehicles issued a timely forward collision warning in most tests with the car and semi-truck.

Check out IIHS’s full report right here. 

Read the full article here

Leave A Reply

2025 © Prices.com LLC. All Rights Reserved.
Exit mobile version