Economy, Auto
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US Survey Reveals Lack of Auto Safety Awareness

US Survey Reveals Lack of Auto Safety Awareness
US Survey Reveals Lack of Auto Safety Awareness

Adaptive cruise control has been an option on some cars for almost a decade. But in a recent national survey, 65% of US drivers did not know what it was.

The survey, by the University of Iowa Public Policy Center's Transportation and Vehicle Safety program, suggests big gaps in the public's knowledge about potentially life-saving features.

Based on the responses, the university and the National Safety Council have developed a new website to teach drivers about new features, from tire-pressure monitoring systems to automatic emergency braking, technology website Product Development and Design wrote.

The site is one of several places that car owners and shoppers can learn about safety technology. The federal government's auto-safety website lists crash-test results and uses icons to highlight cars with recommended safety features, including lane-departure warning and forward-collision warning.

The Insurance Institute for Highway Safety also explains key collision-avoidance features like automatic braking, and lists which cars have them. Carmakers—prodded by government regulators and public crash-test rankings—are rapidly adding safety features.

By 2018, for example, the US will require all new vehicles to have backup cameras. But at the same time, cars are getting more reliable and lasting longer, so millions of people driving older cars may not be familiar with the latest safety options.

The average vehicle on US roads is now 11.5 years old—older than adaptive cruise control. Daniel McGehee, who conducted the survey, was surprised to find that even car dealers and service department managers were not always familiar with new safety features.

"The technology is changing so quickly they don't have a good understanding," said McGehee, director of the Transportation and Vehicle Safety Research program.

The survey, which questioned 2,015 people last September about nine safety features, found that 92 percent of drivers had heard of anti-lock brakes, which have been common on cars since the 1980s. But only about half had heard of more recent options like lane-departure warning, which gives an audible warning or vibrates to warn drivers when the car leaves its lane, or forward-collision warning, which alerts drivers to an imminent crash.

Ninety-four percent were aware of cruise control, which keeps the vehicle at a set speed on the highway. But only about one-third had heard of its more advanced sibling, adaptive cruise control, which maintains a set speed and distance from the car ahead and can accelerate or brake on its own. It used to be a feature on luxury cars, but as radar and cameras have gotten cheaper, it's being added to mainstream vehicles like the Honda CR-V and the Mazda6.

Adding to the confusion is the fact that automakers have different names for safety features. Mercedes-Benz calls its adaptive cruise-control system Distronic Plus, for example, while Subaru packages adaptive cruise control within its EyeSight suite of safety systems.

Financialtribune.com