Citroën, Seat, Skoda, Mitsubishi, Vauxhall, Volkswagen and Volvo all score big wins in an SUV-dominated batch

The latest batch of Euro NCAP crash tests has returned a full house of five-star ratings, with the Volvo XC60 SUV being highlighted the safest car ever tested by the crash safety body.

The Citroën C3 Aircross, Mitsubishi Eclipse Cross, Seat AronaSkoda KaroqVauxhall Crossland XVolkswagen Polo, Volkswagen T-Roc and XC60 all achieved top marks when tested in their standard specifications by Euro NCAP. The body's two-tier testing system scores cars in both their standard and full safety kit-equipped specifications. 

The XC60 scored 98% for adult occupant protection, 87% for child occupant protection, 76% for pedestrian safety and 95% for safety assistance systems, the highest results of any car since the larger Volvo XC90 scored 97%, 87%, 72% and 100% when it was tested in 2015. The XC60, according to Matthew Avery, Thatcham's research director, the XC60's reduced weight, advanced assistance technologies help it to achieve such a high rating.

Thatcham Research, Euro NCAP’s UK testing facility, brought attention to the fact that the C3 Aircross and Crossland X are not fitted with automatic emergency braking (AEB) as standard but made up for its absence elsewhere. These were the only cars in the batch without the system. By contrast, the XC60’s AEB system avoided collisions at all speeds tested. 

Avery explained that following pushback from manufacturers, AEB will not be mandatory for a five-star NCAP rating until next year. A buffer period between 2014 and 2018 was introduced to give manufacturers time to make the tech standard and still achieve top ratings in the meantime. Today, a more advanced lane keep assist system but no AEB can garner a car a five-star rating. 

A Citroën spokesman said: "The specification of each Citroën product range is under constant review. We work hard to ensure every model is optimised in the context of customer demand, the competition and, of course, all legislative requirements. With regards to the C3 Aircross, following a product review here in the UK, Flair versions will be equipped as standard with Active Safety Brake from January 2018 production. The system will remain an option on the Feel trim level."

Avery said: “It’s exceedingly rare for a vehicle to score so favourably across the board. The XC60’s standard-fit safety technologies are excellent, or rather those that we were able to test are - its Turn Across Path and Run Off Road systems are not yet a feature of the Euro NCAP programme.”

The Volkswagen Arteon, Volvo S90 and V90, Range Rover Velar, and Vauxhall Insignia Grand Sport are also among the safest cars Euro NCAP has tested this year.

Read more: 

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Range Rover Velar scores five-star Euro NCAP rating

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Our Verdict

Volvo XC60

Volvo aims its reinvigorated crosshairs at the medium-sized SUV ranks

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Comments
8

8 November 2017

SUV dominated because that's all anyone is selling now.

8 November 2017
WallMeerkat wrote:

SUV dominated because that's all anyone is selling now.

Because that is what the buying public want. 

 

8 November 2017
Leslie Brook wrote:

WallMeerkat wrote:

SUV dominated because that's all anyone is selling now.

Because that is what the buying public want. 

Rubbish. The only SUV in the top 10 is the Squashedcow.

8 November 2017

in case we get crashed into by an SUV

8 November 2017

What worries me about this EuroNCAP thing is that the uneducated may think a 5-star supermini is as safe as a 5-star large SUV.

jgw

8 November 2017
Big Jeff wrote:

What worries me about this EuroNCAP thing is that the uneducated may think a 5-star supermini is as safe as a 5-star large SUV.

Why isn’t a 5 star supermini as save as a 5 star SUV?

XYZ

8 November 2017
jgw wrote:

Big Jeff wrote:

What worries me about this EuroNCAP thing is that the uneducated may think a 5-star supermini is as safe as a 5-star large SUV.

Why isn’t a 5 star supermini as save as a 5 star SUV?

 

So 5-star supermini meets 5-star large SUV head on - which do you want to be sitting in???

8 November 2017
jgw wrote:

=Big Jeff wrote:

What worries me about this EuroNCAP thing is that the uneducated may think a 5-star supermini is as safe as a 5-star large SUV.

Why isn’t a 5 star supermini as save as a 5 star SUV?

I think iirc that the deformable ram/barrier the test car hits or is hit with is altered and represents the car being tested, ie smaller for city cars larger for big suvs etc. Which I've always thought calls into question the point of the test. I may be wrong but that is how I understand the tests to be carried out.

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