YACT: Subaru Impreza Wins Top Safety Gold Pick Award

Reckoner

Lifer
Jun 11, 2004
10,851
1
81
SUBARU IMPREZA EARNS IIHS ?TOP SAFETY PICK GOLD? AWARD
-- 2006 Subaru Impreza receives highest possible safety rating from IIHS for frontal, side and rear-impact crash tests --

CHERRY HILL, N.J., April 16, 2006 ? Subaru of America, Inc. today announced that the 2006 Subaru Impreza has earned the highest rating in the recent Insurance Institute for Highway Safety (IIHS) crash tests. The 2006 Subaru Impreza received ?GOOD? ratings in the frontal, side and rear-impact crash tests for both the driver and passenger seating positions. Based on this performance, the IIHS gave the 2006 Impreza the coveted ?Top Safety Pick Gold? award calling it ?a gold standard? among small cars.

The IIHS Top Safety Pick award recognizes car designs that afford the best protection for people in front, side and rear crashes. This award provides consumers with an overall vehicle assessment based on all three tests.

?We are so pleased that the 2006 Impreza has added the IIHS Top Safety Pick Gold award to the brand?s long list of safety accolades,? said Fred Adcock, executive vice president, Subaru of America, Inc. ?Subaru provides customers with a fun-to-drive vehicle that sets the gold standard for safety at a tremendous value. That?s what makes a Subaru, a Subaru.?

In its report, the IIHS highlighted the reinforced pillar behind the rear passenger door and standard side airbags of the 2006 Subaru Impreza. They also said the active head restraints ?do a better job? than those in other small cars.

The IIHS provides consumers with vehicle safety information, primarily front and side crash test results, and now rear impact, to aid consumers in their vehicle purchase decisions. The test results are relayed to consumers via a simple rating system ? poor, marginal, acceptable and good, with good being the highest. The IIHS crash tests are conducted at speeds higher than required by the Federal Motor Vehicle Safety Standards for both side impacts, at 31 miles per hour, and frontal offset barrier impacts, at 40 miles per hour. The rear crash test simulates a collision in which a stationary vehicle is struck at 20 miles per hour, and is a measure of the effectiveness of the head restraint geometry. The new awards provide consumers with the ability to compare cars? ratings more quickly and easily.
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The Subaru Impreza models were restyled and re-powered for 2006. The 2006 Subaru Impreza 2.5 i Sedan and Wagon have an MSRP of $18,295.

Subaru Safety News
This is the second IIHS ?Top Safety Pick Gold? award for Subaru. The 2006 Impreza joins the Subaru Legacy, also honored with this distinction in its class for superior overall crash protection. The IIHS also recently rated the Subaru Forester the best vehicle in its class for protection against whiplash injury in a rear collision. The B9 Tribeca and Outback continue the Subaru tradition for outstanding safety as evidenced by the NHTSA double 5-Star rating for frontal and side impact protection, as well as 4-star ratings for rollover resistance. For more information on the safety ratings of Subaru vehicles visit www.safercar.gov and www.iihs.org.

Subaru Making Safety Standard
Subaru vehicles have set an outstanding safety standard in their respective segments, many achieving the highest marks in crash tests conducted both by government and private agencies. To Subaru, safety means far more than protecting a car?s occupants in the event of a collision. Ideally, a passenger vehicle should provide the driver with the means to avoid hazardous situations. Subaru calls the concept Active Driving/Active Safety. Designing a vehicle for active safety gives a driver a strong sense of control, maneuverability and security.

Active Safety
Subaru Symmetrical All-Wheel Drive forms the core of the Subaru Active Driving/Active Safety concept. Symmetrical All-Wheel Drive gives a Subaru a significant traction advantage over two-wheel drive cars (front- and/or rear-wheel drive) on all road surfaces. On all Impreza models, the standard 4-channel / 4-sensor Anti-lock Brake System (ABS) incorporates Electronic Brake-force Distribution (EBD). This system enhances braking performance and stability by actively optimizing braking force between the front and rear wheels according to how the vehicle is loaded with passengers and cargo.

Passive Safety
The compact Subaru Boxer engine helps enhance safety, because it allows more crush room in front and on the sides. Subaru vehicles are designed to allow the entire powertrain to slide under the car along the floor tunnel in a severe collision, helping to prevent intrusion into the passenger compartment. All Subaru models are built around a Ring Frame Reinforced body structure design that incorporates front and rear crumple-zone construction to absorb the energy of an impact and help protect the reinforced passenger compartment. Essentially, the Ring Frame Reinforced structure forms a series of ?rings? around the passenger compartment, providing excellent protection in a variety of collision types. This structure increases cabin rigidity and can absorb impact energy from any direction.
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Other Impreza safety features include 3-point seatbelts for all five seating positions, with electrically triggered pre-tensioners and force limiters in front. Active front seat head restraints in the Impreza are designed to help
reduce whiplash injury in a rear collision. All 2006 Impreza models have standard dual-stage deployment

Subaru Advanced Frontal Airbag system and front seat head/chest side-impact air bags. The driver?s side front air bag deploys according to the driver?s proximity to the steering wheel, as measured by a sensor on the seat track. In the passenger side front seat, a sensor module detects weight on the seat ? first determining if it?s occupied, and if so whether by a child or adult ? to control air bag deployment.

Impreza sedan models have integrated headrests for the rear seats, and the wagon models use removable headrests to enable rear seatback folding. All Impreza models are equipped with the LATCH child restraint
anchorage system (Lower Anchors and Tethers for CHildren) for use with compatible child safety seats. The safety brake pedal system in all Impreza models is designed to yield during a serious frontal impact in order to help reduce injury to the driver?s lower limbs.

For more information on Subaru vehicles please visit www.media.subaru.com.

About Subaru of America, Inc.
Subaru of America, Inc. is a wholly owned subsidiary of Fuji Heavy Industries Ltd. of Japan. Headquartered in Cherry Hill, N.J., the company markets and distributes Subaru Symmetrical All-Wheel Drive vehicles, parts and accessories through a network of nearly 600 dealers across the United States. Subaru makes the best-selling All-Wheel Drive car sold in America based on R.L. Polk & Co. new vehicle retail registration statistics calendar year-end 2004. For additional information visit www.subaru.com.
 

yhelothar

Lifer
Dec 11, 2002
18,408
39
91
Not to mention you can much more easily steer out of harms way with a subaru impreza. That in itself will save you far more than any safety feature.
Not surprised they got first, considering these cars were designed to withstand crashes, as car damage and collisions are extremely rampant in WRC.
 

boyRacer

Lifer
Oct 1, 2001
18,569
0
0
Originally posted by: virtualgames0
Not to mention you can much more easily steer out of harms way with a subaru impreza. That in itself will save you far more than any safety feature.
Not surprised they got first, considering these cars were designed to withstand crashes, as car damage and collisions are extremely rampant in WRC.

Too bad their new WRC car blows.
 

Pikachu

Golden Member
Oct 10, 1999
1,178
0
0
Originally posted by: virtualgames0
Not to mention you can much more easily steer out of harms way with a subaru impreza. That in itself will save you far more than any safety feature.
Not surprised they got first, considering these cars were designed to withstand crashes, as car damage and collisions are extremely rampant in WRC.
Aren't bikes more maneuverable than any car?
 

SampSon

Diamond Member
Jan 3, 2006
7,160
1
0
Originally posted by: Pikachu
:roll:
We wouldn't have to worry about that if everyone didn't feel the need to drive 5,000lbs land yachts. No, wait, everyone who commutes daily needs thoes huge SUVs... thoes same people also tow things on a daily basis too! Oh hell they are safer too, because anything you run into will most likely crumble under the force of 5,000 lbs of steel! Better watch out for thoes tractor-trailers though, they arn't who you want to be playing chicken with!

I smashed my impreza into a concrete divider, it drove home fine. Then cost around $8K to fix.
 

Pikachu

Golden Member
Oct 10, 1999
1,178
0
0
It just pisses me off that people tend to overlook that tiny caveat in those safety ratings.
 

yhelothar

Lifer
Dec 11, 2002
18,408
39
91
Originally posted by: Pikachu
Originally posted by: virtualgames0
Not to mention you can much more easily steer out of harms way with a subaru impreza. That in itself will save you far more than any safety feature.
Not surprised they got first, considering these cars were designed to withstand crashes, as car damage and collisions are extremely rampant in WRC.
Aren't bikes more maneuverable than any car?

It's harder to ride one, and there's much more ways to get into an accident. You could just lose your balance, and you will fall. You can't lose balance with a car.
Plus on top of that, having the most death does not equate to having the most accidents. It's true that bike riders are for more likely to die from an accident than a car, but do they get into accidents as often as cars do?
 

Reckoner

Lifer
Jun 11, 2004
10,851
1
81
Originally posted by: Pikachu
It just pisses me off that people tend to overlook that tiny caveat in those safety ratings.

So what are you trying to say? That because it's a small car it doesn't matter?
 

yhelothar

Lifer
Dec 11, 2002
18,408
39
91
Originally posted by: Pikachu
If maneuverablity is the be all, end all of safety, this thing should be bulletproof!

You have a significantly higher chance of avoiding an accident in that go cart than driving an SUV, or even a sports car.
But that does not mean that safety features are useless. Nice job of twisting around what I said.
 

yhelothar

Lifer
Dec 11, 2002
18,408
39
91
Originally posted by: Pikachu
If maneuverablity is the be all, end all of safety, this thing should be bulletproof!

because it's a small car it doesn't matter?
It means there's a catch to this awesome safety rating. That being that it's top of the heap... FOR SMALL CARS. In the overall scheme of things, if safety is important, keep shopping.

That's a popular myth that small cars are unsafe. Studies have shown again and again that drivers of large trucks and SUVs involve the most casualties in traffic accidents. Studies have also shown that the only major correlation in safety is the car's price. More expensive cars have more safety features, and are better designed so that the car does not crush the driver/passengers in the event of an accident.
Large cars maybe safer in an accident between a large car and a small car. However, these kind of accidents make up a small percentage of the accidents out there. Crash tests have shown that large trucks and SUV's are a lot more likely to crush the driver and passengers. Additionally, their manuverability is much slower than small cars, making it significantly more difficult for one to steer their way out of an accident than if they were driving a smaller car. And on top of that, many people driving these SUV's are less likely to even try, having their own psychological delusion that they're safe due to being so high and mighty in their huge vessel. These reasons all contribute to the fact that far more of these drivers die from accidents than smaller cars.

 

Reckoner

Lifer
Jun 11, 2004
10,851
1
81
Originally posted by: Pikachu
If maneuverablity is the be all, end all of safety, this thing should be bulletproof!

because it's a small car it doesn't matter?
It means there's a catch to this awesome safety rating. That being that it's top of the heap... FOR SMALL CARS. In the overall scheme of things, if safety is important, keep shopping.

Hahaha you don't know what the hell you're talking about. The Impreza is from a rally heritage. These cars are made to handle abuse. Take a look at the various Subaru forums one day and look at some of the accident stories.
 

Vic

Elite Member
Jun 12, 2001
50,415
14,307
136
Originally posted by: bR
Too bad their new WRC car blows.


C'mon, if you follow WRC you have to admit that Loeb (while extremely talented) is the luckiest driver who ever lived while Solberg is the unluckiest. I mean... jeez... to have to retire from a wreck on the road section... it just doesn't get any unluckier than that.
 

yhelothar

Lifer
Dec 11, 2002
18,408
39
91
Originally posted by: Pikachu
That in itself will save you far more than any safety feature.
Twisted around?

Yes. That means manuverability is in a sense, "the best safety feature," and not the sole safety feature.
I've gotten in dozens of extremely close encounters with my miata, but was able to steer my way out of the accident. If I was driving an SUV, there's no way I could've steered away in the time I can in the miata. I would have been in far more accidents in the SUV than the miata.
 

yhelothar

Lifer
Dec 11, 2002
18,408
39
91
Originally posted by: PaulNEPats
Originally posted by: Pikachu
If maneuverablity is the be all, end all of safety, this thing should be bulletproof!

because it's a small car it doesn't matter?
It means there's a catch to this awesome safety rating. That being that it's top of the heap... FOR SMALL CARS. In the overall scheme of things, if safety is important, keep shopping.

Hahaha you don't know what the hell you're talking about. The Impreza is from a rally heritage. These cars are made to handle abuse. Take a look at the various Subaru forums one day and look at some of the accident stories.

Yup what paul said
Did you guys see the news story where this driver of an STI was crushed between two semi's, and got away scott free with scratches. These cars are crushed all the time in flips and crashes from rally driving. Safety is one of the biggest priorities of these cars.

C'mon, if you follow WRC you have to admit that Loeb (while extremely talented) is the luckiest driver who ever lived while Solberg is the unluckiest. I mean... jeez... to have to retire from a wreck on the road section... it just doesn't get any unluckier than that.
Yeah a lot of it is luck. There are many crashes where they drove over a tiny bump a little too quickly, and caused their entire car to flip out. Or there was this other stage where the weather conditions were so bad that everyone crashed before reaching the end, causing them to cancel the stage.
WRC rocks
 

Vic

Elite Member
Jun 12, 2001
50,415
14,307
136
Originally posted by: Pikachu
If maneuverablity is the be all, end all of safety, this thing should be bulletproof!

because it's a small car it doesn't matter?
It means there's a catch to this awesome safety rating. That being that it's top of the heap... FOR SMALL CARS. In the overall scheme of things, if safety is important, keep shopping.

You really should look up the insurance statistics. The Impreza (including WRX and WRX-STi) has the highest accident rate among small cars with the second-lowest injury rate -- comparable to much larger vehicles, and extremely impressive when you compare the injury-to-accident ratio.
Thanks though for telling us that you have no clue what you're talking about.
 

Pikachu

Golden Member
Oct 10, 1999
1,178
0
0
Take it up with IIHS
Small/light vehicles have less structure and size to absorb crash energy, so more injurious forces can reach their occupants in crashes. People in lighter vehicles are at a disadvantage in collisions with heavier vehicles. Pickups and SUVs are proportionally more likely than cars to be in fatal single-vehicle crashes, especially rollovers. However, pickups and SUVs generally are heavier than cars, so occupant deaths are less likely to occur in multiple-vehicle crashes.
 
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