Then again that Honda Fit had no side or curtain airbags which will be standard on the US Fit. Future comparison ratings will show which gets better ratings.
True that the Honda Fit will have standard side airbags (good to see that someone other than VW is making safety standard on small cars). But the Euro NCAP frontal score for the Yaris (94%) is still much better than the frontal score for the Fit/Jazz (69%).
Does anyone know if the US Spec Yaris hatch will have the knee airbag like the Euro Spec Yaris does ??
An agency in Europe called the European New Car Assessment Program (EuroNCAP)conducted crash tests on the Toyota Yaris that was outfitted with "side head protecting" airbags as options. The Yaris scored 5 out of 5 stars. The protection package there includes a driver's knee airbag and costs buyers $750 extra.
This is notable because the two Yarii at my local dealer both have the extra airbags as a $650 option. These are the front seat mounted side and rear side curtain airbags for passenger safety in the back as well. Glad to have them in my...uh-hummm...those two Yarii at my local dealer.
Granted we might not take the European crash tests as acceptable for the U.S. but it is welcome news that this newest small Toyota introduced here by all rights should be a very safe small rig. With all of those airbags it really has earned the "rig" designation, yes.
Hey, if it saves my bacon in a crash, good for it! Just some more good Yaris news for those that are thinking they might become Toyota Yaris fans in the U.S.
iluv, I am glad that you see the value of safety features like side bags and curtains. It's great the Yaris offers them as options. But since none of the Yarii I saw at my local dealer last Saturday has that option, I'd like to see them be standard, as they are on the Accent, Fit, and Rio/Rio5.
Are these tests relative to other vehicles in the same class? Is that how it works? Standards that are considered good for that size vehicle? Just wondering.
From the IIHS website they state that you should compare vehicles within one weight class. Heavier, larger vehicles generally will fare better in frontal crashes of vehicles of dissimilar weights.
Did you understand something different? Do I misunderstand their statement or your comment?
What I meant was that you CAN compare the crash test results of cars from different classes for side and rear crash tests, but not for frontal crash tests. I am pretty sure there are notes to this effect on the IIHS web site and maybe even the NHTSA web site if you wish to learn more.
I would too. If you just put them on every car it reduces the cost of manufacture. They made a decision to keep it as an option..I assume they did it to get a lower price point than the competion...before adding comperable options that is.
I would have liked the side air bags as well. It's a shame Toyota made them so hard for us to get. In Europe the Liftback with full airbags (5 door) was the safest car Toyota ever made:
Comments
http://www.euroncap.com/images/results/superminis/car_246_2005/Toyota%20Yaris%20- Datasheet.pdf
Much higher than a Honda Fit/Jazz. Of course, this is because the Yaris is a fresh platform while the Fit/Jazz is five years old and just now comming to the USA.
Does anyone know if the US Spec Yaris hatch will have the knee airbag like the Euro Spec Yaris does ??
This is notable because the two Yarii at my local dealer both have the extra airbags as a $650 option. These are the front seat mounted side and rear side curtain airbags for passenger safety in the back as well. Glad to have them in my...uh-hummm...those two Yarii at my local dealer.
Granted we might not take the European crash tests as acceptable for the U.S. but it is welcome news that this newest small Toyota introduced here by all rights should be a very safe small rig. With all of those airbags it really has earned the "rig" designation, yes.
Hey, if it saves my bacon in a crash, good for it! Just some more good Yaris news for those that are thinking they might become Toyota Yaris fans in the U.S.
2021 Kia Soul LX 6-speed stick
From the IIHS website they state that you should compare vehicles within one weight class. Heavier, larger vehicles generally will fare better in frontal crashes of vehicles of dissimilar weights.
Did you understand something different? Do I misunderstand their statement or your comment?
http://www.euroncap.com/images/results/superminis/car_246_2005/Toyota Yaris Datasheet 2.pdf
http://www.toyota-europe.com/innovation/technology/safety/yar_ncap_2005.asp