The safest car for a teen driver
Giving a set of keys to a teenager can flood the parent of even the
most cautious new driver with fear. Now a new study shows that the
safest kind of vehicle for teen drivers might be a big sports utility
vehicle. The research comes from the Highway Loss Data Institute (HLDI),
a firm run by insurance companies to find ways of reducing crashes and
deaths. Using five years’ worth of insurance claims from 2005 to 2010,
the HLDI compared the collision rates between adult drivers between 35
and 60 years old and teen drivers between the ages of 16 and
19.Regardless of the kind of vehicle involved, the HLDI logically found
that teens had accidents at a higher rate than adults.
For the sliver of teenagers who somehow find their way to the seat of
a supersport motorcycle, the institute found they were more than four
times as likely to get into a crash than an older driver. In vehicles
with four wheels, teen drivers were up to 2.5 times more likely to have
an accident in sports cars. What surprised researchers was that the
crash rate for teens in small cars of all types was still much higher
than average - roughly twice as high as adults in the same vehicles, and
only slightly lower than the rise of driving a regular motorcycle.
Kim Hazelbaker, senior vice president of HLDI, said in an institute
report, that small cars may be less forgiving in sudden manoeuvres, or
that teens may be encouraged to take more risks due to the car’s size.
The lowest risk vehicle for a teen driver? Large and luxury SUVs, where
the crash rates for youths were as little as 10 percent greater than for
adults, and posed a lower crash risk than all but the largest cars.The
reason for the gap? Technology.
The HLDI study analysed claims from vehicles newer than the 2006
model year. By that time, large SUVs came standard with electronic
stability control - systems that keep vehicles from skidding in
emergency manoeuvres which have been shown to drastically reduce crashes
- while in many cars the tech was still an option, especially smaller,
cheaper models that teens often drive.
As of the 2012 model year, all vehicles sold in the United States are
required by law to offer ESC standard. Other HLDI studies have shown
newer SUVs also do a better job of protecting passengers from injuries
and death in crashes than smaller cars and pickups.
It defies parental logic to think the safest ride for a 16-year-old
might be a two-ton truck, and no vehicle can keep all reckless drivers
from harming themselves or others, but for some teens the best answer to
driving safely may be to go big. Yahoo!Autos
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