Understanding Automobile and auto crash incompatibility and a way to have a safer road trip
Crash incompatibility, crash compatibility, vehicle incompatibility, and vehicle compatibility are terms in
the automobile crash testing industry. They refer to the tendency of some vehicles to inflict more damage on
another vehicle (the "crash partner vehicle") in two-car crashes. Vehicle incompatibility is said to lead to
more dangerous, fatal crashes, while compatibility can prevent injury in otherwise comparable crashes. The
effect can be summed up in the fact that 80% of the fatalities in light truck and car collisions occur in the
car. However structural compatibility would help the survival of the occupants of the heavier or less
flexible vehicle also.
The most obvious source of crash incompatibility is mass; a high mass vehicle such as a van or SUV will tend
to cause much more serious damage in a crash with a lighter vehicle such as a typical sedan or compact car.
The National Highway Traffic Safety Administration has done studies of the aggressiveness of vehicle designs.
Aggressiveness corresponds to the risk for the driver of the struck vehicle. A 2003 NHSTA study that
eliminates weight as a factor found that car design is the least aggressive, minivans are 1.16 times as
deadly, pickups are 1.39 times as deadly, and SUVs are 1.71 times as deadly. When weight is included in the
analysis, light trucks (including SUVs) are 20.8 times as deadly in side impact crashes and 3.3 times as
deadly in head on crashes. In 1999 there were 12,242 people in the US killed in vehicle on vehicle
collisions, so improving vehicle compatibility would prevent several thousand vehicular homicides each year.
Although much of the crash incompatibility debate in recent years has centered around SUVs, the concept has
been around far longer. When subcompact cars were introduced in the 1970s, there was a fear that
incompatibilities of mass and design could lead to more serious injuries for drivers of these smaller,
lighter vehicles. Crash incompatibility is an area of active study, although to date only a small fraction
of crash tests focus on two-car crashes, and an even smaller proportion are properly designed to address
incompatibility issues.
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