The National Highway Traffic Safety Administration plans to conduct crash tests on 55 model year 2011 vehicles under its new five-star safety ratings program, the agency said Thursday.
The tougher ratings will include information about advanced safety features such as systems that warn drivers when they swerve out of lanes, and will give vehicles a single overall score for the first time. The program also uses new crash dummies and injury criteria. For example, a frontal crash test will now include an assessment of knee, hip and thigh injuries. A side impact test that simulates wrapping around a tree also will be part of the new ratings system, The Detroit News reports.
“This new testing program significantly raises the safety bar for all vehicle manufacturers,” Transportation Secretary Ray LaHood said in a news release.
The agency plans to release the first set of test results in September. Ford Fusion and Taurus, Toyota Camry, Chevrolet Malibu, Ford F-150, Honda Accord, Dodge Caliber and the Chevrolet Cruze are among the vehicles to be tested.
The agency plans to test vehicles accounting for 72 percent of auto sales initially, but will get back up to more than 80 percent within the next several years, NHTSA Administrator David Strickland said in an interview with The Detroit News earlier this year.
“If we tested every car in the United States, we would crash Ferraris and Maseratis,” Strickland said. “A low-volume car that’s worth $250,000 may not be the best use of our resources.”

