Three
midsize luxury SUVs offer solid protection for front and back seat occupants in
the Insurance Institute for Highway Safety’s updated moderate overlap front
crash test, which now includes a dummy positioned in the second row behind the
driver.
The Lincoln
Aviator, Mercedes-Benz GLE-Class and Volvo XC60 earn good ratings, while the
Acura MDX and BMW X3 are rated acceptable. The Audi Q5 and Lexus RX earn
marginal ratings, and the Cadillac XT6 is rated poor.
“It’s
encouraging that more than half of the 2024 midsize luxury SUVs we tested
performed well in our updated moderate overlap front crash test,” IIHS
President David Harkey said. “The three good ratings in this group show that
our new, tougher standards are achievable when manufacturers commit to
excellence.”
IIHS
launched the updated moderate overlap front test last year after research
showed that in newer vehicles the risk of a fatal injury is now higher for
belted occupants in the second row than for those in front. This is not because
the second row has become less safe. Rather, the front seat has become safer
because of improved airbags and advanced seat belts that are rarely available
in back. Even with these developments, the back seat remains the safest place
for children, who can be injured by an inflating front airbag, and the rating
does not apply to children secured properly in child safety seats.
In the
updated test, a second dummy is positioned in the second row behind the driver.
The driver dummy is the size of an average adult man. The rear dummy is the
size of a small woman or 12-year-old child. IIHS researchers also developed new
metrics that focus on the injuries most frequently seen in back seat
passengers.
For a
vehicle to earn a good rating, there can’t be an excessive risk of injury to
the head, neck, chest or thigh, as recorded by the second-row dummy. The dummy
should remain correctly positioned during the crash without “submarining,” or
sliding forward beneath the lap belt, which increases the risk of abdominal
injuries. The head should also remain a safe distance from the front seatback
and the rest of the vehicle interior, and the shoulder belt should remain on
the shoulder, where it is most effective. A pressure sensor on the rear dummy’s
torso is used to check the shoulder belt position during the crash.
As in the
original test, the structure of the occupant compartment must maintain adequate
survival space for the driver, and measurements taken from the driver dummy shouldn’t
show an excessive risk of injuries.
All eight
SUVs provided excellent protection in the front seat. The three good-rated
vehicles also provided solid protection for second-row occupants, although in
the Aviator the rear dummy’s head came nearer than desirable to the front
seatback during the crash, while measurements taken from the rear dummy in the
Mercedes-Benz GLE-Class indicated a slightly elevated risk of head or neck
injuries.
For the two
acceptable-rated vehicles, the injury measurements were within acceptable
limits across the board, but the motion of the rear dummy during the crash was
cause for concern. In the Acura MDX, the rear dummy submarined beneath the lap
belt, increasing the chances of abdominal injuries. In both the MDX and the BMW
X3, the rear passenger dummy’s head also came close to the front seatback,
which raises the risk of head injuries.
Submarining
was also a problem for the two marginal-rated SUVs. In addition, measurements
taken from the rear dummies in these vehicles indicated a slightly elevated
risk of head or neck injuries in the Audi Q5 and a more substantial risk of
chest injuries in the Lexus RX.
The rear
dummy in the poor-rated Cadillac XT6 also submarined beneath the lap belt, and
measurements taken from the rear dummy indicated a moderate risk of head or
neck injuries and a high risk of chest injuries.
“Though
several vehicles in this class performed extremely well, the fact that we saw
submarining in half the models we tested shows that many manufacturers still
have work to do to improve restraint systems in the second row,” Harkey said.
___
Video Timeline
0:00 –
Preparing for the Test
1:14 –
Cadillac XT6 (Poor)
2:03 – Audi
Q5 (Marginal)
2:54 –
Lexus RX (Marginal
3:44 –
Acura MDX (Acceptable)
4:38 – BMW
X3 (Acceptable)
5:31 –
Lincoln Aviator (Good)
6:24 –
Mercedes-Benz GLE (Good)
7:18 – Volvo XC60 (Good)
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