Here’s an interesting story from Bloomberg News about which vehicle you’re more likely to survive in in a crash:

By Angela Greiling Keane
Bloomberg News
WASHINGTON — Drivers of Nissan’s 350Z sports car and Titan pickup, and General Motors’ Chevrolet Aveo mini and compact Cobalt are more likely to die in accidents than those of other vehicles, an insurance group says.
Drivers of sport-utility vehicles, who used to be the most likely to die in crashes because of rollovers, are now among those with the highest probability of survival, the Insurance Institute for Highway Safety said in a report released Thursday.
“The rollover risk in SUVs used to outweigh their size/weight advantage, but that’s no longer the case,” Anne McCartt, the Arlington, Va.-based group’s senior vice president for research, said in the report on driver death rates for passenger vehicles from model years 2005 to 2008.
None of the 26 lowest-rated vehicles had standard electronic stability control, while almost all of the top-rated ones did, the study found.
Models equipped with the technology, which can automatically apply brakes or reduce throttle speed when drivers over- or under-steer, had lower death rates than those without it.
It will be required on all new vehicles beginning next year.
Of the 26 top-rated cars and trucks, all but one had electronic stability control. In 2008, the technology was standard on 65 percent of cars, 96 percent of SUVs and 11 percent of pickups, according to the insurance institute, which last conducted a driver death-rate study in 2007.
Thursday’s results analyze data from 2006 to 2009, using fatality reporting from the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration.
Vehicles with the lowest death rates include the Audi A6 and the Mercedes E-Class, both luxury cars; Toyota’s Sienna minivan; Ford’s Edge
SUV; Nissan’s Armada SUV; and Jaguar Land Rover’s Range Rover Sport and Rover LR3 SUVs.
Three vehicles made by Toyota, which was probed last year by U.S. regulators and lawmakers for safety-related defects, rated among the 26 cars and trucks with the lowest driver death rates, including the Lexus GX 470 SUV.
Toyota last year recalled its successor model, the GX 460, to reprogram stability-control software after Consumer Reports magazine rated it a safety risk because of potential rollovers.

To see the insurance institute’s report, CLICK HERE.

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