What is life like with your car? Let us know and win £500 in John Lewis vouchers | No thanks
Safety and crash tests
I am looking for some advice about the strength of cars, such as in a crash. I have been told that for a car to be strong, the most important sign of this is that the car must have heavy doors.
Surely this cannot be right as cars are being made lighter for efficiency. As far as I knew, the ncap tests were what counted for how strong a car is, rather than if it has heavy doors.
I have a family member who insists that their car is 'better' than mine because theirs (in their opinion) has heavier doors. Both cars have 5 ncap stars but some people just don't listen, so if I had some facts about which parts of the car have the strength.
Surely this cannot be right as cars are being made lighter for efficiency. As far as I knew, the ncap tests were what counted for how strong a car is, rather than if it has heavy doors.
I have a family member who insists that their car is 'better' than mine because theirs (in their opinion) has heavier doors. Both cars have 5 ncap stars but some people just don't listen, so if I had some facts about which parts of the car have the strength.
Asked on 1 August 2012 by Sunny_22
Answered by
Honest John
Tags:
safety
Similar questions
I hear news reports of battery fires. Do you think its safe to garage an EV at a residential property? Particularly in a garage which is attached or integral to the house.
Apart from regular service schedule...
IB of New Milton referred to electric handbrakes. They may be more efficient as a ‘parking brake’ but, at a stroke, car manufacturers are disposing of a vital handbrake function: its use as an ‘emergency...
I'm buying a new car. Are there any recalls on Peugeot's PureTech 1.2-litre engines?