| For the second year running, Swedish premium car-maker
Saab has been commended by the independently-operated Thatcham
Motor Insurance Repair Centre for the effectiveness of its
Active Head Restraints in reducing neck injury. Thatcham
has just released the results of its second annual whiplash
testing results for the 2006 Model Year, in which it concludes
that the Swedish car manufacturers, including Saab, ‘still
regard whiplash injury as a priority’, with 100 per
cent of models ranking in the highest-possibly category.
This compares starkly with the results of other premium brands.
For example, of the 20 German premium cars surveyed, just
a fifth of those were ranked ‘good’, whilst a
worrying 25 per cent were ranked as ‘poor’.
Even
after a relatively minor impact, neck injury following
rear-end collisions is a common driver complaint, which can
have debilitating long-term effects. In fact, according
to
Thatcham, whiplash remains still the most common injury
in motor vehicle crashes, with over 250,000 cases reported
by
British Insurers annually.
The Saab 9-5 pioneered the use
of Saab Active Head Restraints (SAHR) back in 1996. Since
then, the patented technology
has been fitted as standard to both front seats of all
Saab models sold in the UK. Independent crash investigation
ratings
from around the world have shown SAHR to reduce serious
neck injury to front seat occupants in the event of a rear
end
collision, by as much as 75 per cent compared to cars not
fitted with the technology.
The head restraint is activated
in a rear end impact as soon as the occupant's lower back
is pressed into the seatback.
The head restraint is connected by a linkage to a pressure
plate in the backrest of the seat. Inertia forces the occupant's
body into the backrest against the pressure plate which
triggers a mechanism to push the head restraint upwards and
forward,
catching the head and helping to minimise neck movement.
This helps prevent neck injury by reducing the amount of
head movement relative to the torso. The SAHR system is
entirely mechanical and after activation the head restraint
automatically
springs back to its passive position, ready for future use.
Further
Information about the Thatcham tests and a full list of
results is available at: www.thatcham.org
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