Tesla S, BMW I3 fall short in US crash testing

Tesla Model S seat belt allowed far too much forward movement of the dummy, to the extent that its head hit the steering wheel hard through the airbag. Picture: IIHS

Tesla Model S seat belt allowed far too much forward movement of the dummy, to the extent that its head hit the steering wheel hard through the airbag. Picture: IIHS

Published Feb 1, 2017

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Detroit, Michigan - Two luxury electric cars, the Tesla Model S and the BMW i3, have fallen short of achieving the highest safety ratings in new crash tests by the insurance industry.

The Insurance Institute for Highway Safety tested 2017 models of both cars. Neither earned the institute's "Top Safety Pick" award, which is given to vehicles that get the highest rating in five different crash tests and offer a crash-prevention system with automatic braking. To get a highest "Top Safety Pick-Plus" designation, cars must meet all of those criteria and have good headlights.

In the 2017 model year, 38 vehicles have won the "Top Safety Pick-Plus" designation, including two plug-in hybrids: the Toyota Prius Prime and the Chevrolet Volt. But no all-electric vehicles are on the list. The institute hasn't yet tested the all-electric Chevrolet Bolt, which went on sale at the end of 2016.

Tesla's Model S, an all-electric luxury sedan that starts at $72 500 (R980 000), earned good ratings in four of the institute's five tests, including a side impact test and a head restraint test. But it earned a lower rating in a small overlap frontal crash test, which replicates what happens when the front corner of the car collides with a tree or telephone poll at 64 kilometres per hour. The Tesla's safety belt allowed the crash dummy to move too far forward and it hit its head on the steering wheel.

Poor headlights

The institute said Tesla made a production change in January to address the problem, so the car will be tested again. The Model S has earned the highest ratings on US government crash tests, but the IIHS carries out different tests.

Tesla also earned a "poor" rating for its headlights. And a high-performance version of the Model S, the P100D, got a lower ranking on the roof strength test because its larger battery makes it much heavier, so the roof might not hold up as well in a rollover crash. The government hasn't performed a roof-strength test on the P100D.

The BMW i3, a small electric car that starts at $42,400 (R573 000) , also earned good ratings in four out of five tests. It fell short in the head restraint test, which measures how well the car protects against neck injuries in a rear crash. The i3 earned the second-highest rating of "acceptable" for its headlights.

The US government hasn't yet reported crash-test results for the i3.

AP

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