If you look carefully, the door doesn't actually come off, just the exterior door skin. The car actually did pretty well given the severity and exceedingly rare type of collision with a pole.
I know the Smart was thrown during the impact, but look at the overall structure. I'm incredibly impressed the chassis didn't fold with an impact like that
Both the smart and the Mercedes that crashed into it are owned by the same parent company. As the longest running auto maker, I expect Mercedes to get it correct.
The Tridion Safety Cell uses steel that's 3X stronger than typical car metals. The rest of the body is absolute crap. All breakaway thermoplastics... I know, I own one! The cheap body panels are actually its best feature because they don't dent, warp or get scratched that easily. Hence my 2006 looks almost brand new...
Even though the safety cell of the Smart car held together, the level of g-forces occupants are subjected could be devastating to a person. Especially your internal organs.
The really sad thing is this tests are conducted between 30 and 40 MPH. Very unrealistic in real world driving. I am a retired volunteer fire fighter/EMT. Over the years, many improvements have been made, but even with airbags and ABS and stability control, you still stand a good chance of being killed in even a moderate impact crash. Seatbelts and airbags help. Sometimes.
Agreed. My hope is that automatic emergency braking systems continue to improve and are better able to reduce the impact speed from highway speeds to these tested speeds.
The speed was set as the upper limit of survivability. Much more and you are a corpse... There's nothing much you can do about that. Hit a tree in a NCAP 5 star car from last year at 100Km/h and you are dead... Clip a rail at 50Km/h - you might be okay. The vast majority of crashes happen at lower speeds, where good engineering has an affect on safety.
@@obeseperson Most people aren't paying attention or are driving while on their phones (or whatever) and it usually happens within a span of time that your body can't react.
I have a friend who used to own the same model of Camry as the 2012 (idk what year it was) and she was in an accident with a drunk driver, the car burst into flames and a good Samaritan helped her out of the car. She went to the hospital and made a full recovery.
2:01 my brother was killed driving a Taurus in a single car accident the impact was similar to that but more to the side. He had a basilar skull fracture with no other injuries except a few minor cuts.
Worst vehicle in relatively modern times ever... I was unfortunate enough to have one. The size and packaging was good (why I bought it), but the engineering of literally everything was so bad there should have been laws against it.
The weird part is, I was in a very serious accident with my chevy astro, I got hit by rocks falling from the cliff beside the highway and thrown off. Went airborne before hitting a tree and coming to a stop after going straight off a cliff, the van finally stopped 100 feet down and I survived with almost no injuries. The van held up exceptionally well and did nothing even close to whats shown here. Plus the IIhs also reported that of all vehicles on the road there were the least fatalities involving these vans. Something isnt lining up between real life and the results of that test.
@@mikefly562you fail to realize that the possibility of ejection is quite higher or being thrown into oncoming traffic. Remember these are CONTROLLED environments and it did that. Imagine a real world scenario
I imagine they will in the future. Their focus for next couple of years will be to get more cars performing well in the updated moderate overlap and updated side impact tests. After that, they will likely raise the bar again by either adding a new test or making an existing test more challenging.
These are the real world speeds. The IIHS has came out and said that the reason they test at the speeds they do is it represents the *majority* of accidents with severe injury in the US. If you make a car that holds up at 65mph, it's too stiff and turns your organs to soup at 30mph.
The difference between the Fusion and the Concorde on the pole test is that the Fusion just split, where the Concorde had the A pillar smash into the passenger compartment. Though the A pillar was bent to the side on the Fusion, you can see that the passenger compartment is still intact with plenty of space for the driver. I’d rather be in the Fusion than the Concorde or even the Taurus.
5:41 There wasn’t much space before the crash either. These are small, cheap, econo-boxes. It’s unrealistic to think they’d do well in any type of accident with an immovable object.
Where did you find this footage of the pole tests? I've followed the IIHS for years and have never seen those footages before. I don't see it on their website
ah the 59 bel air crash test again. IIHS has already been called to task for this one. the bel air was structurally compromised in this test, the frame was rusted out to the point of being non rebuildable and the vehicle had been stripped of its engine and transmission leaving the engine bay free to crumple and fold back. IIHS claims the test is still valid.
It doesn’t matter. Maybe if you watched Red Asphalt or Signal 30. You would see cars of that era were massive death traps and most people sustained serious injuries and even death. Idk why y’all keep living in denial.
So the one with the Chrysler being hit the Ford was modeled after an actual fatal red light accident involving these two models. It was done to show how dangerous it is to not be oaying attention and running a red light is.
I had a 1985 Lotus Excel, that had a standard safety roll cage and all TVR`s had hidden roll cages too, so it`s no really that hard to implement , Smart cars also have a Tridion cell/ cage around occupants, the crash on here there was very little cabin intrusion, even the plastic clip on door skin never few off lol
The small overlap test is the most difficult for any car. The iihs introduced the small overlap test in 2012, so all of the cars before 2012 were not designed for it, so of course they failed.
I have watched a number of these videos and read many comments. There is one very important thing I have noticed that no-one ever mentions. How about instead of teaching people how to get a license, we start teaching people how to drive and AVOID accidents???
My dad had a 2008 Ford Fusion and crashed it in the morning when the lights were blinking yellow and some dude sped through it and sent my dad flying into the rail guard, just minor injuries but his glasses broke and his orange juice went flying.
Vehicle designs have definitely become safer, unfortunately there are many of these older vehicles still on the road today with drivers unaware of how dangerous they are in a crash.
Almost every new vehicle aces these tests (which is a great safety development). The bar has been raised with the updated side impact and updated moderate overlap test.
One point of correction: Not one of the cars had a door come off. The door structures were all in place, albeit badly deformed. What was seen to come off in all cases was the door skin. This part is essentially decorative, adding no strength to the door itself.
@@wc2006 Those 59-82 Chevrolet/Pontiacs were the weakest cars back in the day and they were deadly... Chrysler built the strongest cars and were banned from demolition derbies because they were so strong they demolished all others.. Old cars are safe, albeit no seat belts until 1964 and then most only had lap belts.. Chrysler/Dodge/Plymouth had shoulder belts on all starting in 1968...Also the show dukes of hazzard they used a Dodge Charger because they wanted a Chevelle but it demolished in jumps,smaller jumps where they wanted to use the cars over again.. Ford products would also collapse in the front end as due to their weak design and were trash.. Chrysler vehicles they used the Charger and Dodge/Plymouth police cars multiple times for jump scenes (not the 50 foot high and 100 foot long jumps lol) but several feet high and long they lasted several times! Not a boomer just gen X.. I also sadly crashed into a pole at 50 mph in a 69 Dodge Coronet 2 door 383 4 barre V8 (looked like a 1969 Super Bee) and I lived with only 3 bruised ribs was t boned by a stop sign runner...Speed was 50 and I got hit at 50,didnt even see him! Tree's and up hill...I also was rear ended by a 2020 Toyota Camry in my 1968 Chrysler 300 2 door,the Toyota had a crushed in front end,airbags blew and car was totaled, my 1968 Chrysler was able to drive home..I unbent my duel exhaust pipes and only needed a new rear bumper as the 2020 Camry put a few deep scratches and a few small dents more like dings! I kept the old bumper and had the dents hammered out and re chromed and its mint now for a spare! The camry owner suffered a broken nose and wrist from the crash, I just suffered being MAD at the dolt!
I believe that these crash tests have their own original sound. It is not necessary to put the same sound under every video. Especially since these crash tests carry information not only in their sight, but also in their sound. In addition, it should have been noted that the Chevy Malibu crashing into trucks was not a test of the car, but a test of how to make such accidents more survivable with crash-absorbing accessories installed on trucks.
I will state this as an emergency physician. In car crash, that seat belt will lower the risk of sudden death. It will turn sudden death to a manageable life thretening condition which can be cured or reverse by operation or proficiency I excel in but you will suffer a lot of pain, disability. The most safest way to prevent injury is to drive it safe make sure accident not to happen.
I understand that thinking, but size is a help, but not always accurate as to how well passenger cabins resist intrusion. Also, the high centre of gravity of an SUV helps it to roll over.
This is the reason, why all parents want their kids to drive a big SUV.. But this is a 2 edged sword; teenagers have a much higher chance of getting (causing) an accident. As you can see perfectly with the Jeep Wrangler, SUVs and offroaders have a higher chance of rolling over. My brother drives a compact MPV and it's perfect. 102hp, manual transmission and good on gas and it's safe!
@@chriskonte1909 thanks for your comment Chris. Interesting. Some thoughts of mine. There's plenty of truth in saying if I drive a bigger, heavier vehicle I'm probably going to come off better in an accident with a normal size and weight sedan. ( I'm English but will use American terms to try to be understandable to a wider audience.) But many mid size sedans have better /safer passenger compartments than say an Ford F 150 pick up. Tests for safety are very important because they offer buyers the ability to make informed choices and ensure manufacturers are held to standards. The very best manufacturers use safety as a selling point. There is the danger of a sort of arms race where the manufacturers make bigger heavier vehicles to protect their buyers, think Audi Q8, Lincoln Navigator, Range Rovers, etc. And electric cars are even heavier. Above a certain speed / kinetic energy level no accident is survivable.
@@crashcore_cc The Jeep is still WAY safer than any other car shown doing the pole or small overlap test in this video. There was no cabin intrusion and the occupant would most likely have walked away.
I doubt I'd classify the Jeep's performance as unexpected. If there's one thing I certainly always expect from a Jeep during a collision, it's a rollover.
I think the scary part about any of these tests is the fact that they are only going 60 km an hour (don’t quote me on that, but even if a bit faster it is not real world) and smashing into something stationary. Realistically, if two vehicles are going 100 km an hour it is basically the same as driving into an object or wall at 200 km an hour. So realistically, they should be doing these crashes at 200 km an hour to simulate two vehicles connecting at 100 km an hour. Hope that makes sense.
in a collision, speeds do not add up. if you crash at 100 kilometers per hour into another car with the same speed, the result will be the same as crashing into a wall at 100 km / h
My grandmother's one and only accident was in a '96 Chevy Astro. She was t-boned at an intersection and it flipped the van. Her seatbelt held her in place and may be the only reason she survived.
In all seriousness, how can you expect a car to be severely damaged, and its passengers severely injured or killed, in some of these crashes? Crashing the corner of the car into a pole cemented into the ground? A car going underneath a tractor trailer at highway speeds? Or going underneath the edge of the back of a tractor trailer? It's a metal box with sharp right angles. How are the passengers of the car going to survive hitting that?
Lots of drunk/distracted people hit poles and trees. I think its also supposed to simulate clipping another car head on. If we can engineer cars to be safer in those type of crashes then why not? I'm also pretty sure modern tractor trailers are engineered to be safer for cars.
Fun fact. The vauxhall sintra was based off the pontiac transport and it did 3 stars in euroncap in 1999 mostly for side impact protection, but one of the stars was croosed out for poor driver safety. While the opel astra h was based off the chevy cobalt and it did 5 stars in euroncap in 2004, getting maximum points in front and side impact, because they used a barrier reprezenting a car, not a suv. So read the comments on euroncap crash tests because a seemingly safe vechicle is dangerous.
The driver side small overlap results from the 2017-2020 IS also apply to the refreshed 2021-24 models. The passenger side did see structural improvements though. The IS will be featured in my next video coming out soon.
I think, it is not bad, that Jeep turned over after collision. cabin were intact, and car just bounced away, sliding on a side and slowly and harmfully disparing energy on longer time, so it makes less stress on car occupants
I like the music that plays in the background. I would really like to know what it is. Some of the results are awful, but the first Fusion and the Taurus are not so bad as the Concorde, where the driver is killed instantly by the A pillar.
@luiswazhere You don't have Google at all? Must be american, allrighty then hot diddly...Stellantis N.V. is a multinational automotive manufacturing corporation formed from the merger in 2021 of the Italian-American conglomerate Fiat Chrysler Automobiles and the French PSA Group. The company headquarters is in Hoofddorp, Netherlands. Owners: Exor (13.99%); Peugeot Invest (6.98%); Bpifrance (6%) CMO: Olivier Francois Headquarters: Hoofddorp, Netherlands Founded: January 16, 2021 Brands: Abarth; Alfa Romeo; Chrysler; Citroën; Dodge; DS; Fiat; Jeep; Lancia; Maserati; Opel; Peugeot; Ram Trucks; Vauxhall The FCA brands sold in the U.S. are now under Stellantis: Alfa Romeo, Chrysler, Dodge, Fiat, Jeep, Maserati, and Ram. Make your uncle/daddy proud by reading a book or two! :-)
1:37 In my opinion, large and heavy vehicles that protect its occupants well but put others outside of the car in greater danger like the F-150 should not get any safety awards. Safety is collective, but the IIHS is currently making it individualistic. We should prioritize safety features that either enhance or do not affect the safety of others outside of the vehicle.
The Pontiac Trans- sport looked incredibly futuristic in its day. I was gobsmacked when an acquaintance showed off his brand new one. It soon became apparent though, that these were very problematic vehicles.
The Belair test is questionable because you can see the rust come flying out on the slow motion camera... I believe it was at a structural failure point before the crash test, I would want to see the vehicle properly before I believe a plastic car beat a metal car
The purpose of crash testing is not to eliminate injuries, but to raise the speed at which they become serious or fatal. All vehicles will have a speed at which a crash into a fixed object will be non-survivable. If you are going to crash into another vehicle however, then be in the heavier vehicle and your chances improve, at the expense of killing the occupants of the smaller car. If you drive a Smart Car colour yourself Stupid. If you drive a very tall vehicle with a high center of gravity you run the risk of a roll-over and you may die without hitting anything other than a soft shoulder on the road.
A video that didn't appear here, but fits the theme: somewhere in the IIHS Archives is a crash test of a 2016 Honda Pilot being crashed into a 2016 Honda Civic. During the crash test, the Civic's seatbelt severs and sends the dummy violently into the steering wheel and dashboard. I assume the IIHS was going to publish it and various other SUV vs. Small Car tests in a piece about the compatibility issue in crashes. For some reason, though, they decided against it, perhaps due to the Civic's abnormality muddying the data.
Frightening analysis. Modern cars (esp. electric cars) with unnecessary high horsepower/torque, and the ultra bright headlights used today may contribute to higher risks of road accidents. The headlights today give drivers more confidence in dark areas, and impare vision of other drivers. The higher power ratings make it easier to overcome slower vehicles and give drivers a tool to misuse a power advantage (cutting over, dangerous passing). Will be interesting to see how this effects safety going forward.
I know thats not the proper small overlap test but all things considered for a 2001 and 2000s design it held up pretty damn well in the experimental version of the small overlap. the dummies head even hit the airbag which I am surprised by
How many channels do you have? I just keep accidentally finding more and I’m like hey this is the guy from documenting evil, it really is impressive how diverse your content is
Of course the Smart Fortwo went flying! It only weighs 1600 lbs or so... It's a hamster ball of plastic and steel compared to most vehicles... Still safe though. The Tridion safety cell is extra strong to compensate...
Apart from the door coming off the 2001 Taurus did better than I expected to be fair, given it’s age it didn’t collapse like the Chrysler Concorde
If you look carefully, the door doesn't actually come off, just the exterior door skin. The car actually did pretty well given the severity and exceedingly rare type of collision with a pole.
@@colinvickers1191 How do we know that the CRASH TEST DUMMY did "well"? There was no follow up of the DUMMY "injuries"!
I agree. You can see the car kind of deflect away from the pole.
Are you guys just casually ignoring the fact that none of the airbags deployed?
@0w3nn while the Ford Taurus of this vintage doesn't have side curtain airbags, you're right that neither front airbag deployed. Curious.
No matter which car, I hope I'll never experience crashes like these.
Be safe out there
Amen
Dummys cant die
WHAT REALLY???????
Me to and the same for my parents
I know the Smart was thrown during the impact, but look at the overall structure. I'm incredibly impressed the chassis didn't fold with an impact like that
Agreed, the smart car took the impact
Both the smart and the Mercedes that crashed into it are owned by the same parent company. As the longest running auto maker, I expect Mercedes to get it correct.
The Tridion Safety Cell uses steel that's 3X stronger than typical car metals. The rest of the body is absolute crap. All breakaway thermoplastics... I know, I own one! The cheap body panels are actually its best feature because they don't dent, warp or get scratched that easily. Hence my 2006 looks almost brand new...
Even though the safety cell of the Smart car held together, the level of g-forces occupants are subjected could be devastating to a person. Especially your internal organs.
Yeah going 30-40 forward and .5 seconds later going 30 backwards can't be good for your health. Safety cage or not.
Those poor Crash test dummies paid the ultimate sacrifice so we won't have to 🙏
Most of these vehicles were "DEATH TRAPS", near ZERO survivability !
Dummy lives matter
There’s literally a dummy family with different sizes for lighter and heavier males and females as well as small to tiny dummies representing children
40,000 per year pay the ultimate sacrifice for the privilege of driving
Not to mention all the cars who gave up their life for this test to help protect us all too
The really sad thing is this tests are conducted between 30 and 40 MPH. Very unrealistic in real world driving. I am a retired volunteer fire fighter/EMT. Over the years, many improvements have been made, but even with airbags and ABS and stability control, you still stand a good chance of being killed in even a moderate impact crash. Seatbelts and airbags help. Sometimes.
Agreed. My hope is that automatic emergency braking systems continue to improve and are better able to reduce the impact speed from highway speeds to these tested speeds.
The speed was set as the upper limit of survivability. Much more and you are a corpse... There's nothing much you can do about that. Hit a tree in a NCAP 5 star car from last year at 100Km/h and you are dead... Clip a rail at 50Km/h - you might be okay. The vast majority of crashes happen at lower speeds, where good engineering has an affect on safety.
The vast majority of crashes are under 50MPH on city streets. It is realistic, they test at those speeds for a reason.
If you’re about to crash you gotta use the brake
@@obeseperson Most people aren't paying attention or are driving while on their phones (or whatever) and it usually happens within a span of time that your body can't react.
The crash sound effects are out of this world!😂
They are so bad 😂😂😂
@@ammarisrar2005😂😂😂
@@yes8032 how is that funny? Why are you laughing? They are not bad. Its the real sounds i think
@@joakimberg7897 because it’s clearly edited but it’s a horrible attempt at sounding realistic! 😂😂
@@joakimberg7897it’s literally the exact same sound over and over again on every test bro 😂
so obviously fake
I have a friend who used to own the same model of Camry as the 2012 (idk what year it was) and she was in an accident with a drunk driver, the car burst into flames and a good Samaritan helped her out of the car. She went to the hospital and made a full recovery.
I'm glad she's okay!
I love how @ 5:33 the dummy is like "Oh crap! Lemme turn down the radio.
He wanted to hear the crash
😂😂
Lmfao
How did you even noticed that lmao!! Good eye!
Freebird solo ended
2:01 my brother was killed driving a Taurus in a single car accident the impact was similar to that but more to the side. He had a basilar skull fracture with no other injuries except a few minor cuts.
Rest in peace 🕊️😔🙏🏻
Those aren’t the doors coming off. Only the door skins. The doors themselves stay attached. Those pole test are brutal though.
No that door came off
The narration in this video is very good...brief and to the point, without a lot of fluff!
It's literally an ai. At least it seems to be.
@@person.w9780The way it says Honda Fit sure suggests that yeah
Its text to speach by a real person though @@person.w9780
But i like fluff
I’ve seen at least 4 crash videos involving Chevy Astros, all fatalities. The drivers of the other cars all walked away.
Worst vehicle in relatively modern times ever... I was unfortunate enough to have one. The size and packaging was good (why I bought it), but the engineering of literally everything was so bad there should have been laws against it.
The Malibu crash tests were more about improving trailer safety designs rather than the Malibu itself.
The weird part is, I was in a very serious accident with my chevy astro, I got hit by rocks falling from the cliff beside the highway and thrown off. Went airborne before hitting a tree and coming to a stop after going straight off a cliff, the van finally stopped 100 feet down and I survived with almost no injuries. The van held up exceptionally well and did nothing even close to whats shown here. Plus the IIhs also reported that of all vehicles on the road there were the least fatalities involving these vans. Something isnt lining up between real life and the results of that test.
Damn glad you ok mate
No two crashes are alike. The crash sequence is incredible chaotic, exhibiting large differences from small changes in initial conditions.
The car companies still sold all these vehicles knowing they failed the collision tests
I think the reason the wrangler flipped was because the front left tire got wedged under the vehicle, acting like a ramp and flipping it over.
It still handles the crash way better than the other cars.
@@TehButterflyEffect Yeah, structurally, the jeep did ok and maintained the structure, so survivability would be quite high.
@@mikefly562you fail to realize that the possibility of ejection is quite higher or being thrown into oncoming traffic.
Remember these are CONTROLLED environments and it did that. Imagine a real world scenario
@@TehButterflyEffect wrong
@@mikefly562 you really overestimate how many jeep drivers wear seatbelts.
IIHS needs to start testing at real world speeds. 50mph and up. Unless you’re in a school zone nobody is crawling along at 30mph
I imagine they will in the future. Their focus for next couple of years will be to get more cars performing well in the updated moderate overlap and updated side impact tests. After that, they will likely raise the bar again by either adding a new test or making an existing test more challenging.
You are far less likely to get in an accident in an interstate than city streets
These are the real world speeds. The IIHS has came out and said that the reason they test at the speeds they do is it represents the *majority* of accidents with severe injury in the US. If you make a car that holds up at 65mph, it's too stiff and turns your organs to soup at 30mph.
They are real world crash speeds. All of the frontal crash tests are conducted at 40 miles per hour, and have been since 1995.
IIHS also need to test rear crash test mandatory because vehicle these days heavy & truck like that can be fatal for rear occupants.
The Sebring was actually a recreation crash where the driver was severely injured.
Who would've thought that Jeep Wranglers fall over? 😅
Also, the Pontiac Trans Sport's crash looks horrifying
Yeah, one of my bes buddy's has one 😬
@@NGPMOD which one lol
The Pontiac Transport had two tests one was 1.412 mph more than the normal 40 mph and in the second official test the dummy's foot snapped off.
@@iPodHL2 😂 while it folds like an accordion
That’s why they have a complete roll cage
Both terrifying yet soothing to watch.
Why do we have the tendency to watch carnage
because "there for the grace of God go I" - its a path that could be us and it wasn't and we are grateful.
Could be interesting to compare this video with a video collecting the safest vehicles.
Good idea!
@@crashcore_cc Thank you for noticing that post and commenting on it! I am looking forward to seeing your compilation video on the safest vehicles!!!
A moment of silence for all the dummies that lost their lives during these crash tests
The difference between the Fusion and the Concorde on the pole test is that the Fusion just split, where the Concorde had the A pillar smash into the passenger compartment. Though the A pillar was bent to the side on the Fusion, you can see that the passenger compartment is still intact with plenty of space for the driver. I’d rather be in the Fusion than the Concorde or even the Taurus.
5:41 There wasn’t much space before the crash either. These are small, cheap, econo-boxes. It’s unrealistic to think they’d do well in any type of accident with an immovable object.
"Wow look at all these cars crashing" *Sees my car* "Oh..."
That's more of a risk because you can hit you head
Which car was yours?
@@ezekielanderson9055 cobalt
@ Hopefully you’ve gotten a safer vehicle by now
@@ezekielanderson9055 yep ive got a safer and newer car since then :) thank
Thank you for this compilation. This is what a public service announcement would look like if they really took the gloves. Excellent.
Where did you find this footage of the pole tests? I've followed the IIHS for years and have never seen those footages before. I don't see it on their website
from the IIHS TechData if you want to watch it you'll need to register for an account
ah the 59 bel air crash test again. IIHS has already been called to task for this one. the bel air was structurally compromised in this test, the frame was rusted out to the point of being non rebuildable and the vehicle had been stripped of its engine and transmission leaving the engine bay free to crumple and fold back. IIHS claims the test is still valid.
I was wondering because I swear there was no debris coming out of the engine bay I know that most new cars are safer but this was ridiculous smh.
It doesn’t matter. Maybe if you watched Red Asphalt or Signal 30. You would see cars of that era were massive death traps and most people sustained serious injuries and even death. Idk why y’all keep living in denial.
To task by who? Actual experts or third rate quarterwits?
Wouldnt make much of a difference. The only difference would be that the engine and transmission would end up in the drivers lap.
Imagine all the hate they'd get if they crashed a 59 in pristine condition
So what I got out of this video, was to avoid hitting poles
So the one with the Chrysler being hit the Ford was modeled after an actual fatal red light accident involving these two models. It was done to show how dangerous it is to not be oaying attention and running a red light is.
0:11 bros leg unfortunately stuck. Edit:thx for 1 like
If they were really concerned for your safety a roll cage would be standard in all vehicles.
I had a 1985 Lotus Excel, that had a standard safety roll cage and all TVR`s had hidden roll cages too, so it`s no really that hard to implement , Smart cars also have a Tridion cell/ cage around occupants, the crash on here there was very little cabin intrusion, even the plastic clip on door skin never few off lol
The small overlap test is the most difficult for any car. The iihs introduced the small overlap test in 2012, so all of the cars before 2012 were not designed for it, so of course they failed.
I have watched a number of these videos and read many comments. There is one very important thing I have noticed that no-one ever mentions. How about instead of teaching people how to get a license, we start teaching people how to drive and AVOID accidents???
They should make cars out of whatever that pole is made of.
My dad had a 2008 Ford Fusion and crashed it in the morning when the lights were blinking yellow and some dude sped through it and sent my dad flying into the rail guard, just minor injuries but his glasses broke and his orange juice went flying.
1:47 this is why I think you shouldn’t be able to drive anything over 3500 ish pounds after your first dui
It doesn't take much to roll modern SUVs, even without an impact. People over correct too fast and flip the darn things.
Trucks and SUVs are not as safe as people think. They love to roll. I’d much rather be in a sedan if an accident occurs.
@@angelgjr1999
Yeah, a Ford Crown Victoria would be my choice.
@@chrislj2890 Those things are tanks. Wish ford still made them. I’d buy a modern version of it. :)
@@angelgjr1999
Amen, brother!
Type "Moose test" into YT and you'll see effects of evasive steering at speed.
Vehicle designs have definitely become safer, unfortunately there are many of these older vehicles still on the road today with drivers unaware of how dangerous they are in a crash.
Incredible. I wonder how 2023/2024 vehicles will fair.
#yourfirst
Almost every new vehicle aces these tests (which is a great safety development). The bar has been raised with the updated side impact and updated moderate overlap test.
I am curious how my 2024 Mitsubishi Mirage will do in the updated test. @@crashcore_cc
New cars are bigger and heavier than these cars shown...
No. New cars come as light at 2,000 LB.@@mypronouniswtf5559
The c class performed really well
One point of correction: Not one of the cars had a door come off. The door structures were all in place, albeit badly deformed. What was seen to come off in all cases was the door skin. This part is essentially decorative, adding no strength to the door itself.
The ripping off doors is the safest one (if you have a seatbelt on) since it's easier to get out
That Transport/Montana counts for all of its brothers, the Venture, and Silhouette.
The belair had no engine inside it. It is an infamous crash test.
The 59 has an engine in it, you can clearly see it in some of the still photos.
Keep coping boomer
@@wc2006 Those 59-82 Chevrolet/Pontiacs were the weakest cars back in the day and they were deadly...
Chrysler built the strongest cars and were banned from demolition derbies because they were so strong they demolished all others..
Old cars are safe, albeit no seat belts until 1964 and then most only had lap belts.. Chrysler/Dodge/Plymouth had shoulder belts on all starting in 1968...Also the show dukes of hazzard they used a Dodge Charger because they wanted a Chevelle but it demolished in jumps,smaller jumps where they wanted to use the cars over again..
Ford products would also collapse in the front end as due to their weak design and were trash..
Chrysler vehicles they used the Charger and Dodge/Plymouth police cars multiple times for jump scenes (not the 50 foot high and 100 foot long jumps lol) but several feet high and long they lasted several times! Not a boomer just gen X..
I also sadly crashed into a pole at 50 mph in a 69 Dodge Coronet 2 door 383 4 barre V8 (looked like a 1969 Super Bee) and I lived with only 3 bruised ribs was t boned by a stop sign runner...Speed was 50 and I got hit at 50,didnt even see him! Tree's and up hill...I also was rear ended by a 2020 Toyota Camry in my 1968 Chrysler 300 2 door,the Toyota had a crushed in front end,airbags blew and car was totaled, my 1968 Chrysler was able to drive home..I unbent my duel exhaust pipes and only needed a new rear bumper as the 2020 Camry put a few deep scratches and a few small dents more like dings! I kept the old bumper and had the dents hammered out and re chromed and its mint now for a spare! The camry owner suffered a broken nose and wrist from the crash, I just suffered being MAD at the dolt!
I believe that these crash tests have their own original sound. It is not necessary to put the same sound under every video. Especially since these crash tests carry information not only in their sight, but also in their sound.
In addition, it should have been noted that the Chevy Malibu crashing into trucks was not a test of the car, but a test of how to make such accidents more survivable with crash-absorbing accessories installed on trucks.
I will state this as an emergency physician. In car crash, that seat belt will lower the risk of sudden death. It will turn sudden death to a manageable life thretening condition which can be cured or reverse by operation or proficiency I excel in but you will suffer a lot of pain, disability. The most safest way to prevent injury is to drive it safe make sure accident not to happen.
1:52 may this be the answer to everyone asking "how come everyone in America is getting trucks and SUVs and nobody wants a regular sized car anymore?"
OR, have a DEATH WISH by purchasing a sub-compact car!
Yeah I don't think that safety concerns are actually what buyers have on their minds most of the times
I understand that thinking, but size is a help, but not always accurate as to how well passenger cabins resist intrusion. Also, the high centre of gravity of an SUV helps it to roll over.
This is the reason, why all parents want their kids to drive a big SUV.. But this is a 2 edged sword; teenagers have a much higher chance of getting (causing) an accident. As you can see perfectly with the Jeep Wrangler, SUVs and offroaders have a higher chance of rolling over. My brother drives a compact MPV and it's perfect. 102hp, manual transmission and good on gas and it's safe!
@@chriskonte1909 thanks for your comment Chris. Interesting. Some thoughts of mine. There's plenty of truth in saying if I drive a bigger, heavier vehicle I'm probably going to come off better in an accident with a normal size and weight sedan. ( I'm English but will use American terms to try to be understandable to a wider audience.) But many mid size sedans have better /safer passenger compartments than say an Ford F 150 pick up. Tests for safety are very important because they offer buyers the ability to make informed choices and ensure manufacturers are held to standards. The very best manufacturers use safety as a selling point.
There is the danger of a sort of arms race where the manufacturers make bigger heavier vehicles to protect their buyers, think Audi Q8, Lincoln Navigator, Range Rovers, etc. And electric cars are even heavier.
Above a certain speed / kinetic energy level no accident is survivable.
1:20 almost ripped the engine off to
For the Jeep Wrangler it's mostly the fault that a significant portion of the car's front end is fender
It will likely take a full re-design to fix this issue.
It's almost like there's a better way to design a vehicle 🤷🏼♂️
@@crashcore_cc The Jeep is still WAY safer than any other car shown doing the pole or small overlap test in this video. There was no cabin intrusion and the occupant would most likely have walked away.
@isend2c jeeps are stupidly safe, actually. Rollover prone yes, but all suvs are.
@@boredguy2935 maybe you feel so anecdotally, but the data doesn't support that, from here or NHTSA of IIHS.
Those vehicles are not losing their doors though, it's the outer metal skin. It's a pretty big difference.
6:11 where tf is the airbag?
The nissan tsuru doesnt include airbags
4:44 Whats that music name it's relaxing i want the name
The jeep wasnt bad. Part of the fun of a Jeep is rolling over, its to be expected. Otherwise dummy was safely belted in and looked unscathed
The only reason it flipped over is because the suspension is designed for offloading so the suspension is all jacked up.
7:01 the Mercedes Logo in the front grill flies off at the impact
The sound effects are great. I especially love the airbag, 'pop hiss'
I doubt I'd classify the Jeep's performance as unexpected. If there's one thing I certainly always expect from a Jeep during a collision, it's a rollover.
2:35 Well, Consumer Reports gave an overall rating of 25/100 so that and this clip should say everything
What about 1997-2003 Ford F-150 moderate overlap test and 2011-2017 Nissan Quest small overlap test?
3:20 if you ever needed a reason to force your passengers to wear their seat belts, there you go
I think the scary part about any of these tests is the fact that they are only going 60 km an hour (don’t quote me on that, but even if a bit faster it is not real world) and smashing into something stationary. Realistically, if two vehicles are going 100 km an hour it is basically the same as driving into an object or wall at 200 km an hour. So realistically, they should be doing these crashes at 200 km an hour to simulate two vehicles connecting at 100 km an hour. Hope that makes sense.
in a collision, speeds do not add up. if you crash at 100 kilometers per hour into another car with the same speed, the result will be the same as crashing into a wall at 100 km / h
@@васябасалкевич Okay. I thought the force was multiplied by two.
My grandmother's one and only accident was in a '96 Chevy Astro. She was t-boned at an intersection and it flipped the van. Her seatbelt held her in place and may be the only reason she survived.
What about the Nissan Quest? That van did horribly in the small overlap test.
I used to own a Chevy Astro Van . I was shocked to see the heavy damage to the frame in this impact 4:15 .
I drive a 2007 mercury Milan which is the cousin of the Ford fusion. So what your saying is when I hit a pole I'm donzo?
The 03-08 Honda Accord is one of the most indestructible cars ever made. It held up better than all the others in the post test.
Honda makes the best cars
@@pietroromano8108they're declining. Lexus now has that title
In all seriousness, how can you expect a car to be severely damaged, and its passengers severely injured or killed, in some of these crashes? Crashing the corner of the car into a pole cemented into the ground? A car going underneath a tractor trailer at highway speeds? Or going underneath the edge of the back of a tractor trailer? It's a metal box with sharp right angles. How are the passengers of the car going to survive hitting that?
Lots of drunk/distracted people hit poles and trees. I think its also supposed to simulate clipping another car head on. If we can engineer cars to be safer in those type of crashes then why not? I'm also pretty sure modern tractor trailers are engineered to be safer for cars.
They are supposed to have guards on the back (the trucks).
I think you meant to say how can you expect a car to NOT be severely damaged...
yep...If I do any of this stuff I expect to die. Unless I have a monster sized truck which i'm never going to...
And to think we’ve driven around in a lot of these. Might I add 1990 Ford Sierra and the TSURU1??
Ah!! There is the Tsuru!
My Aunt had an Astro mini-van back in the days. That thing was a POS box on wheels
The almighty Holden VB Commodore is still king when it comes to the worst crash test ever
I mean if you knew what was the backstory you'd think differently
You mean the best crash test ever.
Fun fact. The vauxhall sintra was based off the pontiac transport and it did 3 stars in euroncap in 1999 mostly for side impact protection, but one of the stars was croosed out for poor driver safety. While the opel astra h was based off the chevy cobalt and it did 5 stars in euroncap in 2004, getting maximum points in front and side impact, because they used a barrier reprezenting a car, not a suv. So read the comments on euroncap crash tests because a seemingly safe vechicle is dangerous.
Some of your spoken text is very wrong. E.g. the door is NOT ripped off at 02:15 - only the door skin is removed.
Even if you don’t die from the crash itself, you still have to endure the shatter of the glass
1:41 its amazing how much of the car is already underway before the head of the dummy responds.
Except the wrangler has a complete roll cage in it but convertibles are safe right
Do you have the 2021-24 the newer updated version of Lexus IS 350 testing video or results? Thanks!
The driver side small overlap results from the 2017-2020 IS also apply to the refreshed 2021-24 models. The passenger side did see structural improvements though. The IS will be featured in my next video coming out soon.
I think, it is not bad, that Jeep turned over after collision. cabin were intact, and car just bounced away, sliding on a side and slowly and harmfully disparing energy on longer time, so it makes less stress on car occupants
I like the music that plays in the background. I would really like to know what it is.
Some of the results are awful, but the first Fusion and the Taurus are not so bad as the Concorde, where the driver is killed instantly by the A pillar.
Where do I get a Abrahams tank?
Love this video guys you worked really hard this and I love and I appreciate your work and you’re amazing and rest in peace to all those cars
RIP '59 Chevy😢
Fascinating, i was actually expecting every featured vehicle to be from Dodge/Ram/Chrysler/Jeep/Fiat.
@luiswazhere You don't have Google at all? Must be american, allrighty then hot diddly...Stellantis N.V. is a multinational automotive manufacturing corporation formed from the merger in 2021 of the Italian-American conglomerate Fiat Chrysler Automobiles and the French PSA Group. The company headquarters is in Hoofddorp, Netherlands.
Owners: Exor (13.99%); Peugeot Invest (6.98%); Bpifrance (6%)
CMO: Olivier Francois
Headquarters: Hoofddorp, Netherlands
Founded: January 16, 2021
Brands: Abarth; Alfa Romeo; Chrysler; Citroën; Dodge; DS; Fiat; Jeep; Lancia; Maserati; Opel; Peugeot; Ram Trucks; Vauxhall
The FCA brands sold in the U.S. are now under Stellantis: Alfa Romeo, Chrysler, Dodge, Fiat, Jeep, Maserati, and Ram. Make your uncle/daddy proud by reading a book or two! :-)
1:37 In my opinion, large and heavy vehicles that protect its occupants well but put others outside of the car in greater danger like the F-150 should not get any safety awards. Safety is collective, but the IIHS is currently making it individualistic. We should prioritize safety features that either enhance or do not affect the safety of others outside of the vehicle.
The pillars bending means that there is intrusion in the cabin
8:24 and that's why Japanese Kei Trucks aren't sold in the U.S. and why Cab Over pick-ups never took off.
The Pontiac Trans- sport looked incredibly futuristic in its day. I was gobsmacked when an acquaintance showed off his brand new one. It soon became apparent though, that these were very problematic vehicles.
The Belair test is questionable because you can see the rust come flying out on the slow motion camera... I believe it was at a structural failure point before the crash test, I would want to see the vehicle properly before I believe a plastic car beat a metal car
It's basically just a cloud of rust. The test is invalid
The purpose of crash testing is not to eliminate injuries, but to raise the speed at which they become serious or fatal. All vehicles will have a speed at which a crash into a fixed object will be non-survivable. If you are going to crash into another vehicle however, then be in the heavier vehicle and your chances improve, at the expense of killing the occupants of the smaller car. If you drive a Smart Car colour yourself Stupid. If you drive a very tall vehicle with a high center of gravity you run the risk of a roll-over and you may die without hitting anything other than a soft shoulder on the road.
A video that didn't appear here, but fits the theme: somewhere in the IIHS Archives is a crash test of a 2016 Honda Pilot being crashed into a 2016 Honda Civic. During the crash test, the Civic's seatbelt severs and sends the dummy violently into the steering wheel and dashboard. I assume the IIHS was going to publish it and various other SUV vs. Small Car tests in a piece about the compatibility issue in crashes. For some reason, though, they decided against it, perhaps due to the Civic's abnormality muddying the data.
I’ll take a look - thanks for the suggestion!
It's really not THAT abnormal. Look for Brian Chase. Still Unsafe at Any Speed. Auto litigator. Book is oop. Hard to find.
What speed are some of these tests done at? Looks faster than usual 40
Looks more like 60 mile an hour
Frightening analysis. Modern cars (esp. electric cars) with unnecessary high horsepower/torque, and the ultra bright headlights used today may contribute to higher risks of road accidents. The headlights today give drivers more confidence in dark areas, and impare vision of other drivers. The higher power ratings make it easier to overcome slower vehicles and give drivers a tool to misuse a power advantage (cutting over, dangerous passing). Will be interesting to see how this effects safety going forward.
I know thats not the proper small overlap test but all things considered for a 2001 and 2000s design it held up pretty damn well in the experimental version of the small overlap. the dummies head even hit the airbag which I am surprised by
How many channels do you have? I just keep accidentally finding more and I’m like hey this is the guy from documenting evil, it really is impressive how diverse your content is
This is my only channel 🙂
How fast were those cars going? 😲 The offset crashes looked like highway speeds.
only 40. but some were edited to speed up.
@@parodylover999 40 Miles an hour - Just 56Km an hour - Just think of all that energy.... And some of these test dummies were brutally damaged.
The human body wasn’t made to ever go above maybe 15 mph. Anything above that can be fatal.
@@angelgjr1999wow god really fucked up when he was designing us huh
💯
Wow, we’ve come a long way!
🤔 Maybe so, but some of us mere mortals. Still prefer to only drive very old classic vehicles. Because they have far more personality !!...
This video was amazing! Very well done and professional.
(I’d take the Ford Taurus) 😊
Thank you!
Where's the nissan quest??
It will be in part 2 :)
@@crashcore_cc oh okay!
What is the music In the first half of the video?
Of course the Smart Fortwo went flying! It only weighs 1600 lbs or so... It's a hamster ball of plastic and steel compared to most vehicles... Still safe though. The Tridion safety cell is extra strong to compensate...
Spectacular but all of this is ancient history and therefore totally irrelevant. I want to see current results for these tests.