Thursday, October 31, 2013

Cars powered by hydrogen could reach consumers in 2 years


French industrial gases company Air Liquide said Monday it was teaming up with a Toyota subsidiary to build filling stations for fuel-cell electric vehicles in Japan.


With fuel-cell vehicles expected to reach the consumer market in 2015, Air Liquide said it and Toyota Tsusho will create a new company to particpate in a push to build 100 filling stations in and along major highways between four major cities within two years.


Fuel cells generate electricity from the conversion of hydrogen into water, thus producing no pollution, but a network of service stations with the gas must be created. The company plans to build next year two hydrogen filling stations in the Japanese capital, Air Liquide said in a statement.


The country aims to have in place a network of 100 stations in and between Tokyo, Nagoya, Osaka and Fukuoka in place by 2015.


Air Liquide handles production, storage and distribution of hydrogen, and said it has already built more than 60 hydrogen filling stations for fuel cell vehicles throughout the world.


Toyota Tsusho handles the energy-related business of the Toyota Group, which includes the carmaker.

Chevy refines the 2014 Silverado


Don’t let appearances fool you.


While Chevrolet’s 2014 Silverado looks a lot like its predecessor on the outside, major changes give the new Silverado better ride and handling, improved safety and a more luxurious, quiet interior with features that rival some offices.


As an example, a modern strip of outlets — to accommodate three flash drives, two 12-volt power outlets for cellphones and other plug-ins and one regular 110-volt electric plug opening — can sit ready for work at the lower part of the truck’s center dashboard.


A bigger-than-before, colorful 8-inch display screen with efficient touchscreen controls for Pandora Internet radio and navigation system is available, too. So are heated and cooled front seats that work fast, a heated steering wheel, new, rich-looking, leather-trimmed seats and a dashboard that can be covered with material and stitching as if it were lifted from a luxury car.


Best of all, standard, scheduled maintenance is free for two years/24,000 miles, and the 2014 Silverado Crew Cab earned five out of five stars for passenger protection in frontal and side crash tests.


Fuel economy ratings are noteworthy, too.


With the old, 195-horsepower V-6 gone, the 2014 Silverado with base, 285-horseower V-6, automatic transmission and two-wheel drive is rated by the federal government at 18 miles per gallon in city driving and 24 mpg on the highway.


This compares with the top full-size truck mileage rating of 18/25-mpg rating for the 2014 Dodge Ram HFE model with 305-horsepower V-6, automatic transmission and two-wheel drive.


And if buyers prefer a V-8, the Silverado has the best government mileage rating of any full-size V-8 truck: 16/23 mpg with the Silverado’s new, 355-horsepower, 5.3-liter, overhead valve V-8 with direct injection and Active Fuel Management system. This management system automatically disables engine cylinders during travel when they are not needed.


Unfortunately, the test truck with this powerplant did not achieve the government numbers, averaging 14.9 mpg on mostly city and country roads.


Based on the Chevrolet consumer website which still prices 2013 Silverados, base pricing is up some $2,000 from the $24,585 starting retail price for a 2013 model.


Specifically, starting retail price is $26,670 for a base, 2014 Silverado 1500 Regular Cab with standard pickup bed, two-wheel drive and base, 285-horsepower V-6 and automatic transmission.


Starting manufacturer’s suggested retail price, including destination charge, for a base, 2014 Silverado 1500 with four-wheel drive is $30,610. This is a Regular Cab model with two-wheel drive and V-6.


The lowest starting retail price for a 2014 Silverado with a V-8 is $27,765, and this is for a Regular Cab, two-wheel drive model with 355-horsepower V-8 and automatic transmission. The lowest starting price for a 2014 Silverado with V-8 and four-wheel drive is $31,705.


The competing 2014 Ram 1500 starts at $25,295 for a base, Regular Cab, two-wheel drive model with 305-horsepower V-6 and automatic transmission.


The base, 2014 Ford F-150 Regular Cab with two-wheel drive, 302-horsepower, naturally aspirated V-6 and automatic transmission starts at $25,310.


Crew cabs, which are pickups that include full-size back doors and back seats, today account for more than half of all U.S. pickups sold, according to Chevrolet officials. Many truck buyers now use their vehicles for both work and family needs.


So, it’s important to point out the 2014 Silverado Crew Cab, which was the test truck, has a full 40.9 inches of back-seat legroom plus 40.5 inches of rear-seat headroom and felt spacious. But this is less than the 43.5 inches of rear-seat legroom and 41 inches of rear-seat headroom in the F-150 Super Crew.


The test Silverado, which stretched some 19 feet in overall length, impressed with its confidence-inspiring, assisted rack-and-pinion steering and pleasant handling in turns and curves.


Sure, passengers noticed weight shifting from one side to the other of this truck, and there was some head toss in long sweeping curves. But the test Silverado Crew Cab with Z71 off-road suspension handled overall like a smaller vehicle, braked strongly and moved abruptly around obstacles with composure.


There was some bounciness to the ride as expected in a truck with solid rear axle and multileaf springs. But the ride was not jarring and most road bumps were well-managed. On a dirt trail, the test Silverado moved over dirt humps and into and out of potholes capably, and four-wheel drive didn’t seem to be necessary.


All passengers liked the above-it-all views from their seats and ample headroom. Front seats were generous in width and comfortable.


People familiar with older Silverados liked the modernized dashboard.


The interior was noticeably quiet, which made for normal-voice conversations.


The 2014 Silverado has a straightforward offering of engines — the naturally aspirated V-6, the fuel-conscious V-8 that has the EcoTec3 label rather than last year’s Vortec, and a new 6.2-liter V-8.


People looking for something different can find a turbocharged V-6 in Ford’s F-150 and a fuel-sipping diesel V-6 coming for the Ram.


The test Silverado accelerated strongly off the line, and torque of 383 foot-pounds came at 4,100 rpm.


Pluses: Engine sounds were pitch perfect for a truck this big. Storage includes two gloveboxes and a deep and roomy, covered center console. Maximum towing capacity for a light-duty Silverado is 12,000 pounds.


Safety extras include forward collision warning that even vibrates the driver’s seat if a potential crash situation is detected.


The 2014 Silverado has been the subject of two safety recalls.


In July, 843 trucks built during June were recalled because welding on the front-passenger air bag inflator could break during air bag deployment, potentially causing the air bag to not fully inflate.


And in October, some 19,000 Silverado and sibling GMC Sierra pickups in the were being recalled because front seatbacks may not perform according to federal safety standards in rear crashes.

Driver gets fined for wearing Google Glass


Cecilia Abadie was rolling along a California highway Tuesday night when she was pulled over for speeding. She said she was going 70-something in a 65-mph zone, no big deal. But then the police officer saw what was on Abadie’s face: Google Glass.


Immediately, the officer added a second violation to Abadie’s speeding ticket, for using a video screen.


“A cop just stopped me and gave me a ticket for wearing Google Glass while driving!” she wrote on her Google Plus page. “Is #GoogleGlass ilegal while driving or is this cop wrong???”


Turns out the law is real. Under California rules, video screens are prohibited anywhere ahead of the front seats unless they’re displaying GPS information, a map or information about the car itself.


The ticket is also real. A spokesman for the California Highway Patrol would not discuss Abadie’s specific case but said that the officer identified on the citation works in the San Diego bureau and that “we wouldn’t issue a ticket in jest.”


On her Google+ page, Abadie posted an image of the ticket, including the initial of the officer’s first name and the last name.


Reached by phone, Abadie said she would like to get to the bottom of the matter.


“I’m deeply confused,” she said. “I would like to clarify this for me and for the community of Glass Explorers,” a name referring to testers of the high-tech eyewear.


Dozens of people weighed in on Abadie’s Google+ page. Some expressed disbelief. Google Glass enthusiasts encouraged her to challenge the ticket. Some suggested that if she could prove she had been using turn-by-turn navigation or had the device switched off, Abadie might be able to escape paying the penalty. But that would be up to the traffic court.


“I had some lawyers offer to help me,” Abadie said. “I think I’m going to do that because right now I have to drive to L.A., and I’m not sure if I should wear my Google Glass.”


“I think it’s very important to get to the bottom of this, whether it’s legal or not,” she said.

Wednesday, October 30, 2013

The traditional Buick ride, and AWD, too


With even a bit of float, like the old days, the comfortable-riding 2014 Buick LaCrosse Premium with all-wheel drive carried Jan, Ruth and me into Jefferson County for a spaghetti dinner Sunday evening. Tammy Wells’ birthday was the occasion.


The Buick’s smooth ride and roomy interior pit it against the Chrysler 300, Ford Taurus, Toyota Avalon, Kia Cadenza and Dodge Charger among entry-level luxury sedans.


The review model delivered to me was equipped with the 304-horsepower, 3.6-liter V-6 engine and 6-speed automatic transmission. Available as an option is eAssist, a 2.4-liter 4-cylinder and small electric motor which can attain fuel mileage in the 30s.


With winter moving in, the V-6, though, is the stronger choice for most Coloradans – it’s a requisite for the all-wheel-drive feature. The lightly powered eAssist engine’s only driving configuration is with front-wheel drive.


The LaCrosse with V-6 and AWD matches up adequately for the snow and ice against the 300, Taurus and Charger, all of which have four-wheel traction. The Toyota and Kia do not offer AWD.


Not overly powerful, the 3.6 is steady in moving the 4,100-pound four-door, aided by a manual-mode switch on the shifter knob for upshifts and downshifts. There are no paddle-shifters. Fuel-mileage average was 21.7.


A larger waterfall grille dominates the LaCrosse front for ’14. Active grille shutters improve aerodynamic flow. The roof and rear window slope onto a short, upright rear deck, with LED taillights.


Inside, the leather-covered seats are firm and supportive. Wide rear doors lend ease of access and egress for passengers. Trunk capacity is a tight 13.3 cubic feet. A head-up display projects digital speed out front for the driver. The center stack has been redesigned, with an 8-inch touchscreen display and fewer control buttons.


The Buick’s lane-departure warning system, borrowed from last year’s Cadillacs, activates pulse patterns in the driver’s seat in the event the vehicle drifts too far off the driving lane or toward nearby objects. The vibrating nudge of the driver is effective. Among airbags are driver and front-seat passenger, front and rear side thorax and side curtains.


The LaCrosse rides on Goodyear Eagle 245/45R19 tires.


The LaCrosse was introduced in late 2004 as an ’05 model. The first one I drove was priced around $32,000. I reviewed one again in 2010, at a price just over $38,000. Now, this 2014 version with AWD shows up at a sticker price of $45,475.


Heading the list of optional equipment included in the 45 grand total are the lane-departure warning, adaptive forward lighting, adaptive cruise control, upgraded navigation/audio, front fog lamps and LED-trimmed headlights.


Among standard items are rearview camera, heated seats and steering wheel, dual-zone climate control, push-button and remote start, Bose surround sound, four-wheel antilock disc brakes, dual exhausts and Bluetooth and USB port.


Notes from e-mail


Q: I read your columns every week, Bud. Have you ever been to New York State? I was born and raised there. New York City, its metropolitan area and a half-dozen urban areas in the state are densely populated. Ninety percent of the state is sparsely populated rural areas: dairy farms, woodlands, apple orchards and vineyards. You really need to spend a week there, maybe testing a camper, particularly this time of year. The changing of the aspens here pale in comparison to the red, yellow, orange and brown hues of fall in the Northeast. - J.R.


A: Thanks, John. We spent a week in New York three years ago, loved it. In fact, an ancestor of mine, William Wells, was an attorney with a group from England who settled the community of Southhold, Long Island. Much of that family still resides in New York, though my great-grandfather broke away and came west, and here we are. While in N.Y., we split our time between the city and Long Island. I enjoyed both, even paying $5 for the Sunday morning New York Times with my coffee at Starbucks. Bought a couple bottles of wine on Long Island, not so much for its quality, but for the beautiful classic cars on the labels.


Q: Do you know, Bud, if anyone makes an aftermarket lane-departure warning system? - G.P.


A: There are several that do, Gary; I don’t know of the products’ quality ratings. They’re reportedly very costly. I would advise you to consider with much care the addition of an aftermarket system tied to safety.


Q: Bud, I enjoyed your column Sunday regarding the Time dealer of the year award won for 2014 by Bob Ghent of Greeley. In your list of past winners, including the sons/daughters and fathers mentioned, there were two with the last name of Markley. - M.S.


A: The Markley Time winners, Milt, were brothers, Gene Markley of Fort Collins in 1971 and Bob Markley of Greeley in 1990. They were sons of Ferd Markley, who launched an auto dealership in Fort Collins in 1936. Markley Motors still operates there.


Saturday Drive can also be viewed online at DenverPost.com/budwells. Bud Wells can be reached via e-mail at bwells@denverpost.com.

'14 Infiniti Q60 maneuvers San Fran streets, Napa Valley


The 2014 Infiniti Q60 was just another pretty face along the congested downtown streets of San Francisco.


When we drove it out north into the wine country of the Napa Valley on an 80-degree afternoon, though, it was a better showpiece for the coupe’s smoothness and handling qualities.


The Infiniti was waiting for us after flying in to San Francisco International Airport on a Tuesday, the week of the BART (light rail) strike, which added 100,000 more cars to the streets.


The new Q60 is formerly the G37 coupe, only one of a list of name changes for the Japanese luxury carbuilder. Here is a Q card to identify all the new nomenclature:


The G37 sedan becomes the Q50, the G37 coupe and convertible are Q60s and the M37 becomes the Q70. All SUVs and crossovers will carry QX designations. The EX37 is now QX50, the JX35 is the QX60, the FX37 and FX50 are QX70s and the already established full-size SUV, the QX56, will be the QX80. Infiniti said its lineup, with the Q and QX designations, will be more easily identified by the public.


The Q60′s leather interior was highlighted with silk obi aluminum trim, comfortably carrying us as we inched through Fisherman’s Wharf, down the steep twisting descent of Lombard Street and over the foggy Golden Gate Bridge. The navigation system failed to deliver the level of assistance normally available in luxury automobiles, perhaps confused by several closed streets downtown. Little advance notice of turns and directions was provided.


The rear-drive Infiniti was opened up a bit on the Napa Valley drive; in its ruby red finish, it was a standout in the parking area of the Beringer Brothers winery.


Good performance, supported by sport-tuned suspension, was at hand from the 330-horsepower, 3.7-liter V-6 engine and 7-speed automatic transmission, operated manually by long magnesium paddle shifters.


Overall fuel-mileage average of 22.4 on the lower end of the car’s 19/27 mpg estimate was determined by the stop-and-go pace in the city. The 50-to-70 miles-per-hour speedup through the wine country averaged much higher.


Trunk space is very limited in the coupe; two average-size pieces of luggage and a small bag filled it.


The high-end Journey edition of the Q60 carries a base price of $40,400. Adding such options as intelligent cruise, rain-sensing wipers, power moonroof, Bose audio, 19-inch aluminum wheels and aluminum pedals and footrest raised the sticker to $50,405. Enhancing safety are sport brakes with four-piston calipers in front.


Bud Wells can be reached via e-mail at bwells@denverpost.com.

Your parents' Chevrolet affects your car choice more than ads


Automakers and dealers spend nearly $33 billion a year to help you decide what kind of car to drive. But do all of those ads have any more influence than your parent’s Chevrolet? Or Ford? Or Chrysler, Mazda or Buick, for that matter?


A group of researchers including Michigan State University economist Soren Anderson says maybe not. Consumers are much more likely to buy the same brand of car their parents recently chose, according to their new study.


At first blush, the idea that your parents’ car choices would substantially influence yours may seem irrational. After all, automobiles are big purchases that many people research assiduously. And, give or take some wood trim or heated seats, cars are more similar than not. They vary more by class and size than they do by brand.


Buyers can find similar options across multiple brands. The Ford Escape, Honda CRV or Toyota RAV 4 — and many others, if they want a small SUV. Or the Ford Focus, Honda Civic and Toyota Corolla, and more, if they want a small sedan.


This is where parent’s choices seem to have real influence. If your parents bought the Escape, you are more likely to buy the Focus. If they chose the CRV, you are more likely to buy the Civic. On average, children are 39 percent more likely to choose a given brand if their parents chose the same brand, the study found.


It turns out that car preferences are, in some measure, a learned behavior. If your mom or dad rave about the reliability or the trunk space of the family Impala, you likely soak up a bit of that bias. And if you rode in a car day in and day out, you were likely to develop a taste for “minor design details” or have “nostalgic childhood associations” with a car, the study argues.


It is akin to findings in a past study that said a woman is more likely to work outside the home when she is married to a man whose mother did the same. It seems that the family model is more likely to be repeated when it is familiar.


The researchers relied on the Panel Study of Income Dynamics, a long-running survey that follows multiple households of the same families through the generations, to draw their conclusions.


For car makers and dealers, the paper’s findings suggest that established car brands have a built-in advantage over upstarts — failures such as Pontiac and Oldsmobile, notwithstanding.


If automakers can just break through and sell cars to people, the next generation of auto purchasers will lean their way. Not only that, but individuals tend to be brand loyal throughout their lives, something the car industry has long known. That is why Toyota sells compact Corollas as well as more-upscale Avalons. Or why newer brands in the American market, such as Hyundai, have moved from Accents and Sonatas to also sell the luxury Genesis and Equus models.


“The stronger are brand preferences, the more valuable it is to keep consumers within the brand as they move through their life cycle and demand different types of cars,” the paper said.

Why don't US teenagers care about driving anymore?


American teenagers are increasingly uninterested in driving, according to a new report that attributes a drop in driver’s licenses to the flagging economy.


From 1996 to 2012 the number of high-school seniors with licenses dropped by 12% down to 73%, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Highway Loss Data Institute, a nonprofit research group supported by the auto insurance industry, released a report on Thursday that echoed those numbers.


The report shows that from 2006 to 2012 the number of “rated” drivers between ages 14 and 19 dropped 12%. A rated driver is the person that auto insurance companies believe represents the greatest loss potential for an insured vehicle.


Highway Data Loss Institute linked this data with the ratio of unemployed teens versus unemployed adults in the 35 to 54 age bracket. Teen unemployment rose 11% between 2006 and 2012, while it rose 5% among adults.


HDLI’s analysts estimated that 79% of the change was connected to increased unemployment figures by showing that there is an inverse relationship between the ratio of the two age groups’ number of drivers and the spread of workers in those age groups.


“It looks like teens just can’t afford to drive,” says HLDI vice-president Matt Moore in a statement. “Paying for their own cars, gas and insurance is hard if they can’t find a job. At the same time, kids who count on mom and dad to help them also may be out of luck if their parents have been affected by the recession.”


Robert Foss, director of the center for the study of young drivers at the University of North Carolina, also said that the tanking economy impacted young drivers more than others.


“Yes, licensing among young teenagers is certainly down some,” Foss told USA Today. “But it’s because the economy went to hell. If the economy ever recovers for the majority of the population, then licensing among young people is probably going to go right back up.”


In the last decade, many states have introduced graduated licensing laws that increased limitations for drivers under 18. California adjusted its licensing laws in 2006 to require drivers under 18 to be accompanied by a parent or guardian when driving between 11pm and 5am or with people under the age of 20 in the car, for the first 12 months after getting their license.


The Highway Data Loss Institute said that those laws don’t account for the more recent drop in teen drivers.


“A majority of states had graduated licensing laws in place before 2006, so most of the law’s impact on teen driving rates would have been felt earlier,” said the Highway Data Loss Institute.


Some groups peg the drop in teen drivers to other factors. A July 2012 University of Michigan study connected the drop in teen drivers to an increase in internet use.


This article originally appeared on guardian.co.uk

Honda chooses SEMA for new Civic debut


As one of the most popular cars for import tuners it makes perfect sense that the Japanese carmaker should choose the world’s largest car customization show to show off its latest Civic.


Although Honda is keeping many details a secret for the moment, the company has confirmed that the 2014 Civic will have improved, more angular exterior styling cues and a number of under-the-hood engine enhancements.


Although it has a reputation in Europe as a safe reliable car for young families and retired couples, in the US, it became an accidental trendsetter when — because of the same reliability — it became one of the must-have cars for the import tuner movement which sprung up in the 1980s and today is so huge and all-encompassing that it has spawned six installments of “The Fast and the Furious” movie franchise.


As such it is now the platform of choice for those that want to take personalization to the next level but don’t want to do so while blowing up the engine in the process. In order to say thank you to its tuner fans and to help get their creative juices flowing, Honda has chosen the Specialty Equipment Market Association (SEMA) Show in Las Vegas to unveil the new car and will do so alongside a range of suitably customized models.


SEMA 2013 opens its doors to the public on November 5.

Honda to debut new convertible at Tokyo motor show


The S660 Concept combines mid-engine thrills and spills with an environmental conscience and could be heading for production before 2015.


The S660 has the haunches and sharp angles of a serious roadster, but is powered by a 660cc motorcycle engine.


However, to make sure it isn’t left standing at the traffic lights or passed on the finishing line, the small powerplant is force-fed via a turbocharger so that it can deliver 64bhp.


OK, that’s a mere 10 percent of the current Dodge Viper’s 640bhp output and a smidgen over 7 percent of what a McLaren P1 can offer, but this car will be considerably lighter (it tips the scales at around the 850kg mark) and considerably less expensive to buy or maintain. And making sure that the car is always at optimum revs, it uses a CVT gearbox all of which means that it should be fun to drive at any speed.


And, if the car comes to Europe — for the moment it is only guaranteed to launch in Japan — it will do so with a bigger, 1-liter turbocharged engine and therefore even more power.


The reason for Honda’s preference for a motorbike engine in its native Japan is down to keijidosha, which roughly translated means ‘Light Automobile’ and is a class of vehicle that complies with the country’s strictest tax, insurance, size and power put regulations.


Owners of cars that meet these criteria benefit from lower vehicle taxes and insurance premiums and in the 1990s inspired a spate of motorbike-engine-powered two-door, two-seat cult micro sports cars, such as the Honda Beat and Suzuki Cappuccino, which have since become collectors’ items in Europe — particularly the UK where, like Japan, cars are right-hand drive making their import and daily use much simpler. All that’s required is that the speedometer be updated to indicate miles per hour as well as kilometers per hour.


Some keijidosha car fans are already heralding the S660 concept as the return of the Honda Beat. But to see it in the flesh, car fans will need to be in Tokyo on November 20 when the 43rd Tokyo Motor show officially gets underway.

Tuesday, October 29, 2013

Lexus, Toyota, Acura top reliability survey


DETROIT — Japan’s lock on Consumer Reports’ vehicle reliability rankings is starting to ease.


Three Japanese brands — Lexus, Toyota and Acura — took the top spots in this year’s survey, and seven of the top 10 brands are Japanese.


But three non-Japanese brands — Audi, Volvo and GMC — cracked the top 10. And the magazine announced Monday it’s not recommending that consumers buy 2014 models of the Honda Accord V6 and Nissan Altima sedans, two of Japan’s top sellers, because of poor reliability scores. Two other Japanese mainstays, the Toyota Camry and Toyota RAV4, won’t be recommended because they flunked a frontal crash test from the Insurance Institute for Highway Safety.


That’s a blow that could impact sales. Consumer Reports‘ recommendations are frequently cited among the top reasons people buy particular cars and trucks.


Yonkers, N.Y.-based Consumer Reports predicts the reliability of 2014 model year cars and trucks based on a survey of subscribers who own vehicles from current or prior model years. This year, the survey questioned the owners of 1.1 million vehicles.


Problems with infotainment systems, from frozen touch screens to poorly performing voice-operated navigation systems, were frequent complaints. Jake Fisher, Consumer Reports’ automotive testing director, said electronic problems may even be underreported, since some drivers find the systems so confusing they don’t use them. German cars tended to have the best infotainment systems.


The 2014 Subaru Forester got the top score for predicted reliability, but the magazine noted that the 2014 Forester had only been on sale for a few weeks in the spring when owners were surveyed, so there wasn’t much time for errors to crop up. The Subaru Legacy was the top-performing midsize car.


Electric cars and hybrids generally performed well, but the Ford C-Max Energi plug-in hybrid got the worst reliability scores. Ford and its luxury Lincoln brand were near the bottom of the rankings because of customer complaints about their glitch-prone touchscreen dashboard systems and lower-than-expected fuel economy numbers.


The key to reliability is a conservative approach to vehicle redesigns. The brands that do best, like Toyota and Honda, often use time-tested engines, transmissions and other parts from prior models in their newer cars, Fisher said. Automakers with new engines or other untested features in their new cars — like Ford or Cadillac — tend to do worse.


“When you redesign cars from the ground up, you’re going to expect those issues,” Fisher told The Associated Press.


Brands with many older models, like GMC and Volvo, also tend to do better.

Self-driving cars could prevent 90% of road traffic accidents


Research by independent US thinktank the Eno Center for Transportation claims that even with adoption rates of just 10 percent, autonomous vehicles could help save $25 billion annually, while 50 percent of crashes and related injuries could be avoided.


In the US alone, over 30,000 people die in road traffic accidents every year and in 90 percent of cases, driver error is a factor. The result — 2.2 million injury or death-inducing car crashes annually at an economic cost of $300 billion.


As the report stresses: “Over 40% of these fatal crashes involve alcohol, distraction, drug involvement and/or fatigue. Self-driven vehicles would not fall prey to human failings, suggesting the potential for at least a 40% fatal crash-rate reduction, assuming automated malfunctions are minimal and everything else remains constant.”


According to its figures, even if only 10 percent of cars on the road were autonomous vehicles, it could lead to 211,000 fewer serious crashes and 1,100 fewer deaths per year but that to eradicate all accidents in which human error is proven to be a factor, a full 90 percent of vehicles would need to be autonomous.


And while the logic of the thinktank’s central statistics and central arguments are very simplistic — “AVs can be programmed to not break traffic laws. They do not drink and drive. Their reaction times are quicker and they can be optimized to smooth traffic flows, improve fuel economy, and reduce emissions” — that doesn’t mean that they aren’t accurate.


An in-depth study by MIT and Audi (published in June) designed to understand the impacts of stress and strain on drivers under different conditions found that getting behind the wheel of a car can be more stressful than skydiving for the first time. “We found that certain driving situations can be one of the most stressful activities in our lives,” said Kael Greco, project leader, MIT SENSEable City Laboratory of the results.


Likewise the annual distracted driver survey, published by State Farm Insurance to coincide with Thanksgiving Day weekend, consistently shows that driver distraction levels are climbing, thanks to smartphones and the mobile web. Almost half (48%) of 18-29-year-old drivers in the survey said that they surfed the net via their handset while driving (up from 29 percent in 2009), while more than one in three said they checked social media sites and 30 percent admitted to updating their status while behind the wheel. But the most popular activity was checking email, which 46 percent of respondents admitted to doing.


Therefore, the sooner that human distraction can be removed from the driving equation, the better. However, despite massive technological advances, there are still a number of issues that will need to be addressed before autonomous vehicles become a common sight. Chief among these is price. Currently the sensors, lasers, cameras and GPS modules needed to make a car autonomous cost a combined $100,000 and that’s without adding in the cost of the car itself.


“This is unaffordable for most Americans, with 2012 sticker prices for the top 27 selling vehicles in America ranging from $16,000 to $27,000,” says the report. The hope is that as technologies come down in price and that as adoption rates increase, the ticket price of a self-driving car will fall to between $50,000 and $25,000 over the first decade of production.


But as well as cost, systems will need to be sufficiently robust that they can be trusted to perform in all conditions and laws will need to be changed as in the US and in Europe; a car cannot be allowed on the road unless an adult is in full control.


Despite the challenges, a number of experts believe that the age of the autonomous vehicle is almost here. In August, an ABI Research report on the subject stated that by 2020, the first autonomous cars would be hitting the roads and that by 2032, in the US at least, 10 million such new cars would be rolling out of the showrooms and onto the public highways every year.


A number of car companies, including Nissan and Volvo have stated that they will be offering self-driving cars by 2020.

Friday, October 25, 2013

Greeley dealer Bob Ghent earns prestigious nomination


For the third time in 45 years, a Colorado car dealer has followed his/her father in earning the annual Time Dealer of the Year award for the state.


Bob Ghent, whose Chevrolet/Cadillac dealership in Greeley has recently completed a major renovation, will be one of 57 dealers nationally to receive the Time honor for 2014. He’ll be honored at the 97th annual National Automobile Dealers Association Convention and Exposition Jan. 25, 2014, in New Orleans.


His father, Dwight Ghent, was Time Dealer for Colorado in 1980.


Other same-family winners have been Ralph Schomp in 1976 and daughter, Lisa, in 2007; and Harry Dowson in 1988 and son, Dean, in 2001. Lisa Schomp and Dean Dowson are cousins; their fathers were brothers-in-law.


The Ghent family’s involvement in the car business dates back to the late 1930s, when Bob’s grandfather, Frank, opened a used-car lot in Fort Collins. The Ford dealership there was acquired in 1942.


Ghent began washing cars at his father’s Ford dealership in Fort Collins while a student at Rocky Mountain High School in 1976. After earning a B.S. in economics from the University of Colorado in 1983, he handled sales, then managed leasing, finance and insurance, and sales at the family business.


Bob and Dwight Ghent purchased the Chevrolet dealership in Greeley in 1989 and added the Cadillac franchise in 2000.


Bob Ghent is a member of the Greeley Rotary Club and served as the business community division captain for the Northern Colorado Medical Center Foundation’s Monfort Children’s Clinic, which provides medical care to low-income families. He was chairman in 2010 of the American Cancer Society’s Cattle Barons Ball, which raised $300,000 for cancer research and patient care.


He has held leadership positions for the Greeley Chamber of Commerce and was automobile division chairman for the United Way of Weld County.


Ghent, 54, was nominated for the Time award by Tim Jackson, president of the Colorado Automobile Dealers Association. Ghent and his wife, Ann, are parents of two children.


Russ Lyon of Boulder was Colorado’s first Time award nominee in 1970. Last year’s Colorado winner was Jay Cimino.


Bud Wells can be reached via e-mail at bwells@denverpost.com.

Regulators won't investigate Tesla car fire


U.S. auto safety regulators have decided not to open a formal investigation into the Oct. 2 fire that damaged a Tesla electric car near Seattle.


The National Highway Traffic Safety Administration says there’s no indication at this time that the fire was caused by a safety defect.


The agency says it reviewed all available data and will continue to check consumer complaints and other information.


The Tesla Model S hit road debris on a freeway in Kent, Washington. The debris punctured a shield and the battery, touching off a fire that engulfed the front of the car.


The driver escaped without injury and firefighters put out the flames.

2014 Jaguar XJR: Luxury for the superspy in all of us


Forget the Aston Martin — If I was Agent 007, I’d want the new Jaguar XJR.


A four-door chauffeur-mobile by day; hopped-up-on- horsepower mad-machine by night. Perfect for squiring around M and Q to headquarters as well as chasing down a villainous Bond girl on the back roads to Budapest.


The XJ is the best looking of the full-size luxury sedans. At 17.2 feet in its long-wheelbase form, it was never exactly the shy type. But Jaguar decided that its flagship should get the “R Performance” treatment, giving it more kick mechanically and visually.


Pricing of the XJR starts at $116,895 for the regular, and $119,895 for the long wheelbase model. The latter is almost five inches longer, with the extra room in the back seats. If you’re buying a big expensive car, I can’t imagine why you wouldn’t opt for it.


BMW and Mercedes-Benz have long had successful performance divisions. It makes sense that Jaguar (now owned by Tata Motors Ltd. and in the throes of a full-fledged renaissance) is vigorously pushing its own R Performance line. Added power and performance parts means pricier cars, and Jaguar has become very serious about its sporting side.


For example, the aging XK coupe, which starts around $80,000, is now on offer as the XKR-S GT for a staggering $174,000. The midsize XFR-S costs $100,000 and gets 550 horsepower. I’m looking forward to the eventual R treatment to the brand-new F-Type convertible, which is already a tire smoker.


The XJ has seen an R treatment before, but the previous 2004 model-year XJR was a much fustier machine with an antiquated design. The latest body shape is more compelling.


There’s an allure to the glossy sheen of its large surfaces and the deep resonance of the overpowered engine. The XJR L is a Lear jet that never lifts off four wheels.


The base XJ L starts around $82,000 and has 385 horsepower. The XJR L uses the same engine, a 5.0-liter V-8, but it is supercharged to a rating of 550 hp and 502 pound-feet of torque.


Jaguar says that will get you to 60 miles per hour in 4.4 seconds and an autobahn-ripping top speed of 174 mph. Gas mileage is average for the segment — i.e. poor — at 15 city, 23 highway.


But first, the inside. Leather, leather, everywhere, wrapped tightly and form-fittingly around all of the contours, including three humps that rise from the dash containing dual air vents and an analog clock.


This triple mountain of luxury speaks to materials in the model of British bespoke craftsmanship, but still comes off as clean and modern.


That modernity extends to Bond-worthy digital gauges that are found on all new Jags and Land Rovers, which flick to life in a dynamic sequence when the car is first turned on.


The company’s designers like theater, and it’s a bit of fun frippery. The air vents even light up as part of an extraneous $1,700 “illumination package.” Otherwise the car I tested was without silly options, coming to $122,295.


On one drive I had two people in the back and I was trying to overhear their conversation. The car shuts out most road noise but I still couldn’t hear them clearly. Why were they whispering? They weren’t, actually, they were just that far away. Long wheelbase indeed.


All the seats are comfortable, but the front buckets keep you from slipping around under hard driving.


There are clues to its forceful nature on the outside, including side sills that extend off the body and a lip at the trunk edge that works as a spoiler. The car I tested had 20-inch wheels with a stormy gray finish on the rims. The downside to these performance tires is the car doesn’t ride as evenly as a standard XJ, despite an adaptive suspension.


Put the driving systems in dynamic mode and the XJR becomes a hot rod. The torque is incredible, moving the Jag along so quickly that it imperils reason. It powers around corners like a locomotive. I soon came to realize no legal road in America was up to its potential.


So I went onto a racetrack, pretending that I was on a European back road in hot pursuit of the bad guys.


The Jag has an electronic active differential that keeps the power to the tarmac even accelerating out of corners. It happily does things a big sedan simply shouldn’t be able to: squealing tires, solar-plexus-hammering launches and G-force turns.


I would have felt bad treating it this way, except that it is exactly what the XJR L is designed to do. Unnecessary? Totally. Unless, of course, you’re a superspy.

8 states lay out plans to encourage use of zero-emission vehicles


A coalition of eight states announced plans Thursday to boost the use of electric cars and other zero-emission vehicles, promising incentives and an improved network of fueling stations to encourage consumers to buy the vehicles and prompt manufacturers to produce more of them.


The eight governors who signed the agreement, including Maryland Gov. Martin O’Malley, a Democrat, hope to put at least 3.3 million zero-emission vehicles on their roads by 2025. To reach that goal, they pledged to install more electric charging stations, introduce or continue tax breaks for consumers and add such vehicles to government fleets. Some other states have similar incentives, although they did not join the group.


Collectively, the eight states — California, Connecticut, Maryland, Massachusetts, New York, Oregon, Rhode Island and Vermont — represent about 23 percent of the U.S. auto market, according to information the group released Thursday.


“We think it’s doable,” said Mary Nichols, chairman of the Air Resources Board in California, the biggest market in the group. “The market is moving fast. It started from zero, and it accelerated very quickly.”


Nichols and others said the greatest obstacle is consumer resistance to new technology. Buyers must be convinced that the vehicles will work for them, she said, a process that usually requires seeing them on the road or in a neighbor’s driveway — not just in an advertisement.


“Once we are able to get the word out to consumers that there is an infrastructure out there, and [it is] all over the state . . . we’ll be able to encourage a greater desire to get an electric vehicle in Maryland,” said Samantha Kappalman, a spokeswoman for O’Malley.


U.S. motorists bought about 52,000 electric cars in 2012, up from about 17,000 in 2011, according to the group. More than 40,000 plug-in cars were sold in the first half of 2013. In addition to all-electric cars, the group wants to encourage production and purchase of fuel cell vehicles, which run on hydrogen, and plug-in hybrids, which have both electric and gasoline engines.


The burning of fossil fuels to power cars, trucks, ships, trains and planes was responsible for 28 percent of U.S. greenhouse gas emissions in 2011, according to the Environmental Protection Agency.


The development of electric vehicles has been limited by, among other factors, the high price of their batteries and the limited range of cars that run solely on electricity.


Ken Elias, a partner in Maryann Keller & Associates, an automotive consulting firm, said the best way to encourage the construction of charging stations and other infrastructure is to provide incentives to private industry.


Real estate developers and private companies need to install them at workplaces, so commuters can charge cars at home and at work, he said.


“Private real estate needs an incentive to put these charging stations in, and someone’s going to have to pay for them because they need to be maintained and the electricity isn’t free,” Elias said.


Wade Newton, communications director for the Alliance of Automobile Manufacturers, said in a statement that “automakers are committed to these technologies. After all, automakers have invested billions of dollars in bringing these products to market. By next year, there will be 26 battery electric vehicles and plug-in hybrid electric vehicles on sale, and we need a strong, robust, vibrant market for those vehicles.”


Maryland wants to put 60,000 zero-emission vehicles on its roads by 2020, Kappalman said, and will add 110 to 160 public charging stations to the 430 that exist. In addition to the $7,500 federal tax credit available to buyers of such vehicles, the state offers a $1,000 excise tax credit, a $400 tax credit for any equipment purchased and access to HOV lanes, she said.


In 2012, 1,764 electric vehicles were sold in Maryland, up from 227 in 2011. This year’s sales are expected to surpass last year’s, she said.

Thursday, October 24, 2013

Jeep Grand Cherokee, Durango show diesel, V-6


Chrysler has sent our way a couple SUVs with power options to the popular Hemi V-8 – the 2014 Jeep Grand Cherokee Overland EcoDiesel and the ’14 Dodge Durango Limited V-6.


They’re mated to 8-speed automatic transmissions, effectively raising mpg standards for each.


New to the Grand Cherokee this fall, the diesel is a turbocharged 3.0-liter V-6 built by Italian-based VM Motori (associated with Fiat). Tremendous torque (420 lb.-ft.) gives the V-6 diesel maximum towing capability of 7,400 pounds, equal to the bigger Hemi V-8.


The diesel, which adds $4,500 to the Jeep’s sticker price, has strong low-end torque and the overall power range is smooth. Its EPA estimate is 21/28; my overall average was 25.8 mpg, based on a 70/30 percent highway/city split.


The impressive mix of torque and mpg is the selling point for the higher-priced power.


A two-speed transfer case and electronic limited-slip differential are part of the Quadra-Drive II four-wheel-drive setup on the review model. Quadra-Lift air suspension can lift the ground clearance to 11.3 inches for offroad tasks, or can lower the clearance for high-speed highway aerodynamics and for easier entry when parked.


A driver-selectable dial on the center console offers, in addition to automatic setting for normal driving, a choice of Sand, Mud, Snow and Rock, which alter throttle, brake and suspension response for optimum traction on the various terrain conditions.


An imprint, “Since 1941,” at the bottom of the thick, nicely finished wood-and-leather steering wheel (heated) is a reminder of Jeep’s outstanding history.


The Overland trim level and engine option pushed price of the Grand Cherokee to $54,480. Among other amenities are navigation/audio with 7-inch screen, backup camera, panoramic sunroof, front seats heated and cooled and rear seats heated, dual-zone air conditioning, adaptive cruise control and blind-spot detection.


A power liftgate opens access to large 36.3-cubic-feet cargo space behind the second row of seats. A broad, sloping A-pillar and wide side mirror create some view blockage, especially to the right at intersections.


The Dodge Durango, a three-row alternative to the Grand Cherokee’s two rows of seats, performed adequately with the 290-horsepower V-6 engine.


Its 8-speed automatic transmission is controlled from a dial shifter on the center console, with paddle-shift capability from the steering wheel.


Though paling in power compared with a Hemi V-8, the Pentastar V-6 and 8-speed delivered an overall fuel mileage average of 21.8. In early January, a Hemi-powered Durango R/T carried me over ice-covered roads in below-zero weather to DIA for a flight to Detroit and showed a reading of 14.6 mpg.


Though built on the same platform as the Jeep Grand Cherokee, the Durango is a foot longer in overall length. It is recognized by its crosshair grille and high-riding hood.


The 2014 Durango Limited’s cabin features wide, comfortable front seats with padded armrest over the center console. Second-row seats in the review model are captain’s chairs, and the third-row seating is decent and roomy enough to carry two adults when necessary.


An interior highlight is an 8.4-inch touch-screen display for navigation and audio systems.


The Durango rides on 20-inch wheels, with Goodyear 265/50R20 tires. Cargo space is only 17.7 cubic feet behind the third row of seats; fold them, thougth, and it expands to almost 48 feet.


The Durango Limited AWD sticker price reached $45,675 with the addition of a rear DVD entertainment system, in which video screens lifted up from the rear of front-seat headrests. Among other options are automatic headlight leveling and high-beam control, power tilt/telescoping steering wheel, rain-sensitive windshield wipers, blind-spot and cross-path detection and power sunroof.


A look back


Thirty-five years ago this week, I reviewed in The Denver Post the French-built 1978 Peugeot 504 diesel sedan. Excerpts:


Besides its diesel engine, there are a few differences noticeable from the driver’s seat of a 1978 Peugeot 504 four-door sedan. The ignition switch is on the left side of the steering column, and the directional-signal lever is to the right. On the road, though, this French-built Peugeot will provide ride and handling of comparable or better quality than many more-expensive European models. At a price in the $10,000 range, the 504 diesel sedan is Peugeot’s most popular model in the U.S. The diesel engine is a 141-cubic-inch overhead-valve 4-cylinder. A wait of as long as a minute and a half is necessary for preheating the cylinders before starting the engine on a cold morning. It is noisy upon starting, but quiets down within a few blocks of driving. Acceleration isn’t quick, but is adequate. A sunroof adds to warm-weather driving comfort, though it was somewhat difficult to open, slide and close. Joe DiStefano, district parts and service manager for Peugeot, said this would smooth out with more use. With a 4-speed transmission, the Peugeot averaged 28.7 miles per gallon in city driving and 31 on the highway.


Saturday Drive can also be viewed online at DenverPost.com/budwells. Bud Wells can be reached via e-mail at bwells@denverpost.com.

Roomy 2014 Enclave is Buick's best-selling vehicle (review)


The best-selling Buick in America, the Enclave, is a roomy, smooth-riding, sizable family SUV with top safety scores and a novel center air bag that deploys between the front seats in certain side crashes.


For 2014, the pleasantly styled Enclave sport utility vehicle with standard, three rows of seats adds enhanced audio and more safety features — front collision alert and lane departure warning.


With a premium feel and a not-too-premium price, and with a record of average reliability, the Enclave is a recommended buy of Consumer Reports magazine.


But government fuel economy ratings — 17 miles per gallon in city driving and 24 mpg on the highway for a V-6-powered, front-wheel drive model — put the Enclave at the lower end of crossover SUVs in gasoline mileage. Crossover SUVs have exterior styling and ride height similar to traditional, truck-based SUVs but use underlying car-based platforms to provide a car-like ride and better fuel economy.


Fortunately, base pricing for the Enclave has increased just $325 from the 2013 model year.


Starting retail price is $39,665 for a base, 2014 Enclave with 288-horsepower V-6, automatic transmission and front-wheel drive. Starting manufacturer’s suggested retail price, including destination charge, for a 2014 Enclave with all-wheel drive is $41,665.


The base Enclaves come with cloth-covered seats, rear park assist, rearview camera, power driver and front-passenger seats, 18-inch wheels and power liftgate among the standard features. Luxury appointments, such as leather seats, Bose sound system and rear entertainment system, come with upper-level trim packages.


The Enclave is one of three corporate siblings, all built by parent company General Motors Co. with the same 288-horsepower V-6 and six-speed automatic transmission. But the Enclave’s siblings are lower-priced and come standard with different cloth-trimmed seats and 17-inch or different-design 18-inch wheels, rear camera, manual liftgates and manually adjustable front seats, among other things.


Specifically, the 2014 Chevrolet Traverse has a starting MSRP, including destination charge, of $31,670 for a front-wheel drive model. The 2014 GMC Acadia has a starting retail price of $35,440 for a front-wheel drive model.


While the Enclave is priced higher than its siblings, it’s priced below other large, luxury-branded, crossover SUVs with three rows of seats.


For example, the 2014 Audi Q7 starts at $48,595 with turbocharged, 280-horsepower, gasoline V-6 and Audi’s eight-speed, Tiptronic automatic transmission. But leather-trimmed seats, power adjustable and heated front seats, park system with rear sensors, power liftgate, premium audio with 11 speakers and all-wheel drive are among the Q7”²s standard equipment.


U.S. sales of the Enclave are up nearly 12 percent so far during calendar 2013, to 46,384. This tops all other Buicks, including the cars.


Enclave buyers get an SUV with upscale styling, inside and out, because in contrast to the plainer-looking Traverse and blocky , the Enclave looks nicely dressed up.


Best of all, even adults can sit in the third row in the 16.8-foot-long Enclave, as the flat-cushioned, rearmost seats offer an impressive 37.8 inches of headroom. And the middle person in the third row can extend legs between the two, second-row captain’s chairs in seven-passenger models.


True, the third-row seat cushion is short, so there’s not complete thigh support, and the middle person doesn’t have a head restraint. But there’s good access to the third row, and accommodating seat tracks for the first and second rows mean legroom can be arranged fairly for all. There are nicely sized grab handles at the door openings, too.


When cargo, not passengers, is the priority, the Enclave can provide a commodious 115.2 cubic feet of room aft of the front seats. Even keeping the second row for passengers preserves up to 68.9 cubic feet of cargo space behind these seats, and that’s as much as some smaller SUVs offer with just front seats saved for passengers.


Weighing more than 4,920 pounds, the test Enclave had a heavy, solid feel.


No wonder the federal government gave the 2014 Enclave top, five-out-of-five stars in passenger protection in both frontal and side crashes.


The new frontal collision alert provides early visual and audible warnings of potential crash situations to help drivers possibly avoid an accident. The new lane departure system keeps a watch on the Enclave driver possibly wandering into another car’s lane.


Standard safety features include electronic stability control, traction control and seven air bags — the seventh being the one that deploys in the middle of the front seats and keeps front passengers from being tossed to the side too far in certain side crashes. Thank goodness a rearview camera and rear park assist system, with audible beeps, are standard, too.


The metal pillars at the sides of the rear windows of the Enclave are thick, and the rear glass on the liftgate sits up high, making it difficult to see what’s behind.


The smallish turning circle for such a large vehicle was a pleasant surprise.


While there was some weight shift from one side to the other in curves and corners, the Enclave overall rode comfortably, though not firmly. It was noticeably smooth on highways, where the suspension soaked up most all road bumps. The interior was quiet.


But fuel economy, with mostly city driving, was poor at 14.8 mpg. This is less than the government’s estimate of 16/22 mpg for an all-wheel drive Enclave like the tester.


The 3.6-liter, dual overhead cam V-6 delivered power steadily, though it could take a bit of time to rev up. Peak torque of 270 foot-pounds comes on at 3,400 rpm. At times, transmission shifts were noticeable.


Some nits: The old-style, clickity blinker sounds, the lack of push-button start on the $50,000 test vehicle, awkward-to-reach clothes hooks and an off-putting, industrial-size rubber button to close the power liftgate.

Cost, economy keep many teens from driving, report says


 WASHINGTON — American teenagers seem to get no thrill from driving in an electronic age when their friends are a finger tap away 24-hours a day, an era when Twitter, Instagram and texting have displaced the mall and the malt shop as hangouts.


On the other hand, a new report suggests, maybe it’s just that driving has gotten too expensive.


“It is the economy, not a preference for smartphones or other technology, that is keeping young people from driving,” says a study out Thursday from the Highway Loss Data Institute, an insurance industry research group.


“I don’t see any evidence that the young people are losing interest in cars,” General Motors’ chief economist, G. Mustafa Mohatarem, told the institute.


That belief — it’s “the economy, stupid,” as Bill Clinton strategist James Carville famously said — runs counter to the conventional wisdom of recent years that the U.S. teenage and post-college crowd are more urban-centric and less enamored of the car culture than any generation since World War II.


The institute report suggests an eventual reversal in trends that have seen a 12 percent drop in licensed high school seniors and a 23 percent drop in the number of miles driven by those younger than 35. The AAA Foundation for Traffic Safety said in July that just over half of teenagers are licensed by the time they reach 18, an age at which two-thirds of teenagers were licensed 20 years ago.


The institute report shows that teens and recent graduates fared far worse in the job hunt during the recession than their elders.


Tracking unemployment among young people against the declines in driving, institute Vice President Matt Moore sees a connection.


“It looks like teens just can’t afford to drive,” he said. “Paying for their own cars, gas and insurance is hard if they can’t find a job. As the economy picks up again, it’s possible that more teenagers will get behind the wheel.”


The institute bolsters its conclusions with a number of scholarly studies, including one that found that relatively recent state laws that restrict nighttime driving by young drivers or the number of teen passengers they carry had a minimal effect in deterring young people from getting driver’s licenses.


The report cited the work of Michael Sivak, a University of Michigan researcher who has played a central role in documenting trends among young drivers. In a 2012 report, he wrote, “It is possible that the availability of virtual contact through electronic means reduces the need for actual contact among young people.”


The institute report, however, underscores a survey Sivak did this year that found that only 3 percent of 18 and 19 year olds said that virtual contact was the main reason they didn’t drive. Thirty-eight percent said they were too busy to get a license, and 17 percent said driving was too expensive.


Sivak said this week that his survey produced another important finding about those 18 to 39 years old.


“When we asked, ‘When do you plan to get a driver’s license?’ 21.5 percent indicated that they will never get a license,” Sivak said. “So for a substantial percentage of young adults without a license, this is not just a postponement of getting a license, but a permanent decision that reflects major societal changes.”

When have presidential contenders used constitutional amendments to get votes?



When have presidential contenders used constitutional amendments to get ahead?


Sen. Rand Paul hopes a constitutional amendment may boost his presidential chances.The Kentucky Republican has introduced a longshot amendment that calls for all laws to apply to elected officials exactly as they apply to constituents — an indirect jab at the 2010 health care law, which he claims treats members of Congress differently.It’s not the first time a presidential contender has used a proposed amendment as campaign fodder, even though the White House has no role in amending the Constitution.Here’s …


View “When have presidential contenders used constitutional amendments to get ahead?” on Spundge

Tesla cars go Android


The company is often seen as the Apple of car makers so Elon Musk‘s decision to update the current flagship Model S with a Google Chrome web browser and Android emulating operating system (OS) could surprise some.


The company’s CEO made the announcement at a special Tesla event in Munich, Germany this week, but pointed out that the changes will not happen overnight. So, from late next year Tesla customers will be able to access the internet in-car via Google’s Chrome, and the informatics platform will be fully Android-compatible — it currently runs a version of Linux that can support modified Android and iOS apps — meaning that it will be easy for developers to write Tesla-specific apps or to port existing Android apps to run on the car’s software systems.


As well as being the pure electric vehicle with the longest range on a single battery charge currently in production, the Tesla Model S also has the largest touchscreen interface of any road car. The 17-inch system not only offers an online connection and access to the vehicle’s navigation system, but also replaces many of the analogue switches and dials — for features such as air conditioning — that litter most vehicle cabins. However creating something that takes full advantage of a display more than twice the size of the average tablet could take some doing on the part of Android app developers — Apple CEO Tim Cook has described most tablet apps on Google Play as simply stretched smartphone apps.


At the Munich event, Musk also stressed that Germany is the company’s top European focus (Musk wants to sell more Teslas in Germany than he has in the U.S.) and the country’s first six supercharger locations will be officially revealed on Thursday. He also revealed that the Model S will be getting a retro-fitted power upgrade so that it can keep up with other cars on the speed limitless Autobahn and that by the end of 2014 there will be 30-40 supercharging stations up and running.

Wednesday, October 23, 2013

2014 Honda Odyssey remains an impressive minivan option


Minivans might not be cool in the general sense of the word, but if you have a big family or transport a lot of people, they might be just what you need.


One minivan that has been around for nearly two decades and is still going strong is the Honda Odyssey. I recently spent some time in a 2014 Honda Odyssey Touring Elite, and I’ll let you know how it performed and who might want to pick one up.


LOOKS


On the outside, the Odyssey looks like what it is: A minivan.


It’s big and long and not too fancy-looking. It’s not overly boxy or unattractive, just keeps it pretty simple in terms of design and has some nice curves to it.


A power moonroof is standard on the higher-end lines, as is a power tailgate.


Inside, the best way to describe the Odyssey is spacious. You have the three rows of seats, including a pretty comfortable third row that is easily accessible, and even the rear storage area is pretty spacious, as it’s been carved out a bit deeper on the bottom.


One nice touch is the inclusion of a vacuum in the back so you can suck up any messes, an inevitability in a family vehicle that will likely transport many children. And there are lots of cup holders and storage areas to put away all that stuff you might need when you’re on the road.


Another cool feature, pun intended, is the “cool box” up front, where you can put drinks to keep them chilled.


ENGINE, HP


The 2014 Odyssey Elite features a 248 horsepower, 3.5 liter V6 engine on all trim levels. It was powerful, but not overly so. This is a big vehicle, I didn’t expect it to rocket away from stop lights. But once you get going, it’s a strong, steady and mostly quiet ride that responds pretty well to the driver’s commands. I wouldn’t exactly call it nimble, but it’s not stubborn either.


Push-button start is standard on all models other than the base LX.


MPG


For a vehicle this large, the mpg numbers are very good on the Odyssey. You get 19 city/28 highway and 22 combined mpg. That’s pretty much in line with what I experienced, and you’ll be getting gas less often than a lot of folks in smaller vehicles.


TOUCHSCREEN


You get a dual-touchscreen setup in the Odyssey Touring Elite — large screen on top and small screen on bottom. At first it’s a bit confusing, but you’ll figure it out pretty quickly.


There are also voice controls for much of what you’ll be doing, limiting the need to use the screens too much anyway.


My test vehicle had the Honda Navigation System (which is also voice controlled) and the rearview camera, helpful safety feature.


ENTERTAINMENT


To keep the kids occupied in the back, you can also opt for a rear entertainment system. The screen can also be listened to via wireless headphones if you don’t want the DVD playing its audio throughout the vehicle. A larger, 16.2-inch wide screen comes at the Touring Elite level.


The Touring Elite also features a pretty booming system for a minivan — 12 speakers, 650 watts, subwoofer. More scaled-down stereos appear in lower trim levels, starting with a 240-watt system with 7 speakers in the base model.


Bluetooth streaming is a standard feature, and Pandora streaming is integrated into the car so you don’t have to touch your phone to access all your Pandora stations and controls, which is convenient and safe. Also standard on all trim levels are a USB jack and an AUX jack.


SAFETY


This being a family vehicle, safety is king and the usual complement of airbags is standard, along with anti-lock brakes, traction control and more. The Elite I tested had other safety feature that are helpful (lane departure warning, forward collision warning), but these features are only offered on the EX-L and Touring/Touring Elite lines (not available at the LX or EX levels).


One safety feature across the lineup is child-proof rear door locks, something parents will be glad to see. And there’s lots of child seat latches in case you’re carrying a crew of little ones.


PRICE


All of this nice stuff doesn’t come for free of course. The Elite trim level ride I tested came in at just over $45,000. If you go for the base model of the Odyssey without all the trimmings, you’ll be out the door for roughly $30,000, so you have a pretty wide range of prices on the Odyssey depending how decked out you make it.


BOTTOM LINE


For families in the market for a minivan, the 2014 Honda Odyssey is one of the best options they currently have available.


Between its overall drive quality, the spacious interior and the creature comforts and safety features available, it will stand up to almost anyone’s checklist of what they’re looking for in a minivan.


There is some impressive competition, too — namely Chrysler’s Town and Country minivan — but the Odyssey should find its share of families willing to take it on the long journey its name implies.

White replaces silver as favorite car color


Move over, silver.


After more than a decade as the world’s favorite car color, silver is falling in popularity to white. PPG Industries, the leading supplier of automotive paints, says 25 percent of the vehicles it supplied in the 2013 model year were white, up 3 percent from the prior year. Silver and black tied for second, with 18 percent each.


White dominates in Europe, North America and Asia. Only in South America is silver still king.


Apple Inc., with its all-white stores and gadgets, made white a high-tech color. The variety of whites — from flat shades to creamy pearls — is also contributing, says Jane Harrington, PPG’s manager of automotive color styling.


But if you don’t relish a whiteout on the freeway, never fear. Automakers are currently scouting colors for the 2016 and 2017 model years, and Harrington is showing them some eye-popping options, from a pink-tinged bright red developed in Asia to a rich dark gray with faint green highlights.


Eleven different browns — from light copper to dark chocolate — and an equal number of grays are part of PPG’s annual color show for automakers at its automotive center in the Detroit suburb of Troy. There are six yellows and seven greens, from seafoam to dark olive. One notable absence: Powder blue, which is increasingly confined to electric cars or hybrids.


Harrington and her international team determine color trends by watching fashion, architectural paint colors and other predictors. She thinks we’ll see more deep jewel tones like teal and more earthy metallics, like reddish orange, in the coming years. With the end of the recession, drivers don’t mind being showy again, she says


Car buyers could also see taxi-like yellows and other flat, bright colors, which are growing in popularity thanks to small, funky entries like the Kia Soul.


Pastel tones, like mint green and very light pink, are also in the mix.


PPG will take its color tour on the road to Los Angeles, Europe and Asia and will then start working with individual automakers on their choices. Companies typically choose eight to 10 colors for every model. PPG won’t say how many cars it supplies paint for each year, but it works with every major car company.


“They think about the vehicle and how that color will translate,” Harrington said. “That color, sparkle and finish helps define the car’s character.”

Chrysler starts shipping Jeep Cherokees


Chrysler began shipping the new Jeep Cherokee on Tuesday, giving dealers a long-awaited entry in the fast-growing compact crossover SUV market.


Distribution of the Cherokees had been delayed while Chrysler engineers tinkered with the new nine-speed automatic transmissions to make them shift more smoothly.


Company spokesmen confirmed that trucks hauling Cherokees began leaving a Toledo, Ohio, factory on Tuesday morning, heading for Jeep dealers across the nation.


At Golling Chrysler-Jeep-Dodge-Ram in Bloomfield Township, Mich., north of Detroit, employees waited eagerly for the first truckload of Cherokees to arrive Tuesday afternoon.


Owner Bill Golling said the delay in shipping probably cost Chrysler hundreds of millions of dollars in revenue because the company books the sale when it ships cars to dealers.


It shows the company is more concerned about quality than short-term profits, he said.


“The temptation would have been there in the old days to ship the car and get the money,” he said. “That’s not the way it is any more.”


Cherokees are far more sleek-looking than the boxy model they replaced, the Jeep Liberty. That will help them go head-to-head with the top sellers in the compact crossover market, the Honda CR-V and Ford Escape.


The compact crossover segment is among the fastest-growing in the U.S., with sales more than quadrupling in the past 13 years to more than 1.6 million, according to LMC Automotive, an industry data and research firm.


The segment is important to U.S. automakers trying to take sales from the Japanese companies that have long have dominated the market. The segment’s growth rate is second only to midsize crossovers such as the Toyota Highlander and Ford Edge.


Dealers have been clamoring for the Cherokee since the summer. Several reported getting orders in advance.


“We’re anxious to get it,” said Russell Barnett, owner of a Jeep dealership in Winchester, Tenn., southeast of Nashville. “The Cherokee name has quite a reputation with it that we think will add several sales to our business.”


Barnett, who also owns Ford and General Motors dealerships, said other brands are selling a lot of compact crossovers in his area. “Right now, on the Chrysler side, we’re kind of missing that market,” he said.


Chrysler originally planned to start deliveries between July 1 and Sept. 30. But distribution was delayed while engineers tried to smooth out the new transmission.


Chrysler built about 12,000 Cherokees but held them at the plant, at rail yards and other locations around the country until the transmission computer-control software could be updated.


Short delays are common in the auto industry as automakers hold new models at factories until they can fix problems. But longer delays have hit Chrysler especially hard in the past year, first with a freshened Ram pickup and then with the Jeep Grand Cherokee large SUV.


Those delays were responsible for a 65 percent decline in Chrysler’s first-quarter earnings. Along with the Cherokee issues, the delays caused Chrysler to cut its sales and earnings forecasts for the year. The Auburn Hills, Michigan-based company now expects to ship 2.6 million vehicles worldwide in 2013, at the low end of its goal of between 2.6 million and 2.7 million. It expects to earn between $1.7 billion and $2.2 billion, down from its previous target of around $2.2 billion.


CEO Sergio Marchionne said after the second-quarter earnings that the delays were due to growing pains as the company moved from making 1 million cars and trucks in 2010 to more than 2½ times that this year.

Nissan recalls nearly 152,000 SUVs to fix brakes


DETROIT — Nissan Motor Co. is recalling nearly 152,000 Nissan and Infiniti SUVs to fix faulty brake control software that could increase the risk of a crash.


The recall covers some Nissan Pathfinders from the 2013 and 2014 model years, as well as the 2013 Infiniti JX35 and its successor model, the 2014 QX60.


Nissan says that during light braking on rough roads, the antilock brake software could cause longer-than-expected stopping distances.


Nissan will notify owners within 60 days, and dealers will reprogram the antilock brakes free of charge.


Owners can contact Nissan at (800) 647-7261.

Self-driving cars offer safety, economic benefits


In some ways, computers make ideal drivers: They don’t drink and then climb behind the wheel. They don’t do drugs, get distracted, fall asleep, run red lights or tailgate. And their reaction times are quicker.


They do such a good job, in fact, that a new study says self-driving cars and trucks hold the potential to transform driving by eliminating the majority of traffic deaths, significantly reducing congestion and providing tens of billions of dollars in economic benefits.


But significant hurdles to widespread use of self-driving cars remain, the most important of which is likely to be cost. Added sensors, software, engineering and power and computing requirements currently tally over $100,000 per vehicle, clearly unaffordable for most people, the study said. But large-scale production “promises greater affordability over time,” it concluded.


Questions also remain about public acceptance, liability in event of an accident, and the ability of automakers to prevent car computers from being hacked.


Nevertheless, the advantages of self-driving cars are such that if only 10 percent of cars and trucks on the road were self-driving, they could reduce traffic deaths by 1,000 per year and produce nearly $38 billion in economic and other savings, said the study by the Eno Center for Transportation, a foundation dedicated to improving transportation.


If 90 percent of vehicles were self-driving, as many as 21,700 lives per year could be saved, and economic and other benefits could reach a staggering $447 billion, said the study, a copy of which was provided to The Associated Press.


“There will be many steps before we get to that, but it does feel like there is a whole new world that completely changes everything in terms of our perspective on driving that could emerge eventually,” said Joshua Schank, Eno’s president and CEO.


For example, the passenger compartment may be transformed as former drivers safely work on laptops, eat meals, read books, watch movies and call friends. And cars that can be programmed to pick up people, drive them to their destination and then park by themselves may change the lives of the elderly and disabled by providing critical mobility.


Once a critical mass of self-driving cars is on the road, they can start “platooning” — driving closely together but keeping a steady distance between each other without the fuel-burning, time-wasting, stop-and-go typical of traffic congestion. That could smooth traffic flows, reduce commute times and increase highway capacity.


Government research indicates driver error is likely the main reason behind over 90 percent of all crashes. Over 40 percent of fatal traffic crashes involve alcohol, distraction, drugs or fatigue. But self-driven vehicles wouldn’t fall prey to such human failings, suggesting the potential for at least a 40 percent reduction in fatal crashes, the study said.


Crashes can also be due to speeding, aggressive driving, over-compensation, inexperience, slow reaction times, inattention and various other human driver shortcomings, the report noted, suggesting that computers could also reduce those.


But Clarence Ditlow, executive director of the consumer advocacy group Center for Auto Safety, cautioned that while self-driving cars hold great promise for reducing accidents caused by driver error, much will depend upon the safety standards the government sets for the vehicles and how well manufacturers make them.


Otherwise, he said, “you could be substituting computer errors for human errors.”


Spurred by what some see as the future direction of the auto industry, carmakers are stepping up their research. General Motor and Nissan are furthest along, but Audi, BMW, Ford, Mercedes-Benz, Toyota, Volkswagen and Volvo have also begun testing driverless systems. Google’s self-driving cars have clocked over 400,000 miles on California public roads.


Many of the features that go into creating a self-driving car are already available, especially in high-end cars. Adaptive cruise control adjusts speed faster or slower in response to traffic. Lane departure systems warn drivers when they’re drifting out of their lane, and some can even automatically steer the car back. Collision avoidance systems automatically brake to prevent front-to-rear crashes. And parking assist systems range from rearview cameras that show drivers what is behind them to vehicles that can actually park themselves.


The hardest part will likely be making self-driving cars “cost effective to the point where this is not just a gadget that some people enjoy, but becomes mainstream,” Schank said.


For example, hybrid and electric vehicles still haven’t overcome their price gap with conventional vehicles, and so remain at a smaller share of the auto market than people had anticipated they would be at this point, he said.


States are already seeking to prepare the way for self-driving cars to join other vehicles on the road. California, Florida and Nevada have passed laws to regulate the licensing and operation of self-driving cars. California has directed that licensing requirements be ready by 2015.


The National Highway Traffic Safety Administration has urged states to establish procedures for testing self-driving cars on public roads, but has also cautioned states against licensing sales of the vehicles to the general public. The agency is also conducting research on the vehicles.

Tuesday, October 22, 2013

Everything you never wanted to know about car seats


There are many things we do in private that we hope others never see. Installing a car seat is up there for me. Having just moved from New York City, where I rarely drove anywhere, to the country, where I rarely walk anywhere, car seats have suddenly become part of my daily life, and even though I know they may one day save my son’s life, I do not get along with them. When I’m fighting to install one into my car by myself, the process invariably involves instruction manuals (for my car seat and my car), YouTube installation videos (necessary since my manuals seem to be written in Pirahã), ample cursing, and me punching the car seat. Whoever said violence is never justified clearly never owned a Britax.


Most parents will agree car seats are a pain to install; worse, the stats suggest that three out of four times, we’re doing it wrong. But the angst surrounding car seats does not end with installation — pretty much everything about them is ridiculously confusing. The American Academy of Pediatrics recently changed its recommendations on when to use which types of seats, but chances are, your state law disagrees. Rumor has it that next year, the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration will tell parents to stop using the Lower Anchors and Tethers for Children system (LATCH) to secure car seats once the combined weight of your car seat and your child exceeds 65 pounds, which begs the question — do you know how much your car seat weighs? I don’t even know how much my kid weighs. Then there is the “Freakonomics” claim that car seats are in fact useless, the Consumer Reports debacle in which the organization apparently had to recall some reviews after screwing up its safety tests, and, oh yeah, the fact that some car seats simply do not fit in some cars. But hey, guess what? Your kid should be in a car seat until she’s 8 years old and don’t even think about letting her ride in the front seat until she’s 13. K?


First, the very basics: Why these insufferable plastic contraptions are well worth the hassle. Car seats can be life-saving, and to understand why, we have to go back to high school physics. When your car flies down the highway at 70 mph, you go this fast, too. This means you and your car have a heck of a lot of momentum, a figure that reflects speed and mass. When you come to a rapid halt in a collision, your car’s momentum has to drop quickly, which requires force — a force that deforms your car, among other things. Your own momentum must drop, too; you have the choice of flying through the windshield and letting the force of hard pavement stop your momentum, or you can use a seat belt, which does the same thing but a little more amiably.


Seat belts do more than just keep you from becoming a projectile; they are also slightly elastic, so they lengthen the time over which your momentum slows (as opposed to if you’d slammed into the pavement), which ultimately reduces the total force on your body at any one time. That’s good. Seat belts also ensure that this force hits two of the strongest parts of your body — your pelvis and your shoulders — and that your more delicate tissues, such as your genitals, abdomen and neck, remain unscathed (unless your car gets crushed to the point of crushing you, too). So: Seat belts are awesome.


Car seats, however, are better — which is important because car crash injuries are more dangerous to children than adults. Motor vehicle accidents are the No. 1 cause of death in children; more than one-third of kids who died in accidents in 2011 were unrestrained. “For a kid, things can come apart much more easily. When we sustain whiplash, they can break their necks,” says Ben Hoffman, a pediatrician and car seat specialist at the Oregon Health and Science University in Portland. Forward-facing car seats, which the American Academy of Pediatrics now recommends kids use from ages 2 to at least 4, have five-point harnesses. They distribute the force associated with impact across an even larger area — there are more straps coming into contact with your kid’s body — which means less force being applied to any single point. According to Partners for Child Passenger Safety, a long-standing research partnership between the State Farm Insurance Company, the Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia and the University of Pennsylvania, forward-facing car seats really do save lives: When these car seats are not seriously misused — i.e. when parents actually strap their kids in and attach car seats to their cars (apparently some don’t even try?) — car seats of all types reduce a 2- to 6-year-old child’s risk of death in a serious crash by an average of 28 percent compared with seat belts.


But it’s the rear-facing seats that are the real life-savers for kids under 4. Most crashes are frontal, which means that the force applied to riders typically comes from the front. Rear-facing seats distribute the force of impact along the entirety of the backside of your child’s body. Again: same force, but it’s distributed across a much greater area still, which means, yes, less damage. Rear-facing seats also prevent kids’ heads from flying forward as happens to forward-facing passengers. Head-flying is bad for neck muscles and bones, as they have to snap the head back in place (would you want to use your neck as a bungee cord?). One recent study reported that newborns to 2-year-olds were 76 percent more likely to be seriously injured in a car crash when they were in forward-facing car seats compared to rear-facing car seats. Seventy-six percent is a lot. In 2011, the American Academy of Pediatrics changed its recommendations to say that kids should remain in rear-facing car seats until at least the age of 2 (they used to say age 1); many state laws are not this strict — they are still, I guess, catching up with the science — but I’d do what the doctors say.


What about booster seats, which the AAP says you’re supposed to use for 4 to 7-year-olds who have outgrown their forward-facing harness seats? They don’t protect quite as well as the harnessed seats and not nearly as well as rear-facing seats, because they use only the seat belt as a restraint. They are, however, important to ensure that seat belts actually sit where they are supposed to. When kids under 8 wear seat belts without booster seats, the belts can cut across their necks and abdomens, which is precisely where you do not want a massive amount of force to hit your kid. A 2009 study conducted as part of Partners for Child Passenger Safety found that kids between 4 and 8 were 45 percent less likely to sustain moderate to serious injuries in crashes when they were restrained in high-back or backless booster seats to lap-and-shoulder seat belts alone — and this reduction in injury risk went up to 67 percent for kids in post-1998 car models.


What’s important to keep in mind, though, when considering all these studies is that parents who use car seats may differ from parents who don’t use car seats in many important ways. They may drive safer cars and drive more slowly, for instance, both of which could also influence injury risk. Researchers attempt to control for these confounding factors to isolate the effects of car seats themselves, but these controls are never perfect.


In fact, a small body of research downright contradicts many of the studies I have just mentioned. In 2005, University of Chicago economist Steven Levitt and journalist Stephen Dubner, co-authors of the bestselling “Freakonomics,” published a controversial piece in the New York Times Magazine arguing that “there is no evidence that car seats do a better job than seat belts in saving the lives of children older than 2.” Their assertions were based on several studies Levitt conducted. One mined data from a federal database called FARS, which records the details of U.S. crashes that kill at least one passenger, and found that kids over 2 were no less likely to die in crashes while in car seats than were kids wearing lap-and-shoulder belts. Another Levitt study using crash data from a national database and those of several states found that for kids aged 2 to 6, car seats did not prevent serious injuries any better than lap-and-shoulder belts did. Car seats did, however, reduce the risk of minor injuries by 25 percent.


What gives? Levitt says his results differ from those of earlier studies because data collection in the latter may have been flawed. Information about car seat use and seat belt use in the studies conducted as part of Partners for Child Passenger Safety came from telephone interviews conducted by State Farm Insurance, and “if you were a parent involved in a crash in which your child was injured, and a researcher with your insurance company called you, what would you say if your child was not restrained (i.e., wasn’t even wearing a seat belt)?” Levitt asked when we corresponded over email. “You tell the person the kid was using an adult seat belt.” It’s seems like a fair point — if people lied and said their kids were in seat belts when they were really not in seat belts, it would make car seats seem more life-saving than they really are. But when the Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia researchers designed their experiments, they considered this possibility. Because some crashes were subject to onsite investigations, the researchers were able to compare parent responses with what the investigators actually found — and yes, it’s possible to tell when seat belts have been used in a crash, because the belt fabric gets frayed or the buckles get bent. Most of the time, they found, parents told the truth.


The Philly researchers have problems with Levitt’s studies, too: The crashes from the FARS database, which he used to calculate fatality risks, may not be representative of the average car crash, because FARS collects data only from crashes that kill at least one passenger. Drivers who get into deadly crashes, the researchers say, are often different from drivers who get into nonfatal crashes-they drive older cars or drive more recklessly, for instance, and reckless drivers may also be more likely to install car seats incorrectly. These facts might explain why, in Levitt’s studies, car seats didn’t seem to work very well.


It’s hard to tease out who’s right, but in a way it doesn’t matter: Levitt admitted to me that most parents should use car seats. “My own research suggests a slight benefit in car seats reducing injuries, so it probably makes sense for parents to keep using them,” he says. Levitt uses them for his own kids, he says, at least when it’s convenient. Ultimately, he says that his goal was never to encourage parents to stop using car seats, but rather to nudge the government into investing in research on better child restraint technologies.


Right now, though, what is the best technology? All car seats have to adhere to federal regulations, so don’t worry about buying a dud. I said “buying,” because you shouldn’t accept hand-me-downs; most car seats expire after about six years, in part because the plastic and harness webbing degrade from heat and cold. As far as I could find out, there are no comprehensive online databases matching best and worst car seats to various car models, but the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration does rank many popular car seat models for “ease of use,” which includes whether they are compatible with most cars and whether their installation manuals are actually decipherable. (Most aren’t: One study reported that car seat manual instructions “exceed the reading skills of most American consumers.” Yes, scientists actually study these kinds of things.)


If you’re a safety-conquers-all kind of parent, remember this simple rule: Don’t graduate your kid to the next type of safety seat until you absolutely have to, because “every time you transition, you’re going to lose a little bit of protection,” Hoffman, the Oregon pediatrician and car seat specialist, says. So if you’re in the market for an infant car seat, consider one that has a high rear-facing weight limit — there are a bunch now that go up to 40 pounds, the average weight of a 4-and-a-half-year-old boy — because the longer your kid can sit facing backward, the safer he will be. (And don’t worry about his scrunched-up legs getting hurt in an accident: more leg injuries occur when kids are in forward-facing car seats. That said, height does matter, because your kid’s head needs to rest at least one inch below the top of a rear-facing seat.) It may sound crazy to you to keep your 3-and-a-half-year-old rear facing, not to mention it being a pain in the ass when it comes to passing back snacks. But in Sweden, most kids are rear-facing until age 4, and when Volvo’s insurance company analyzed the data from Swedish car crashes from 1976 to 1996, they concluded that kids up to age 4 in rear-facing seats are 20 percent less likely to be injured than kids in forward-facing seats. (Likewise, try to keep your toddler in a forward-facing harness seat as long as possible before moving to a booster seat.)


But if you, like me, are the parent of a 2- or 3-year-old who currently sits in a forward-facing harness seat, don’t go out right now and buy a new seat that will let your child “regress” back to the last stage. I floated this possibility by one of my sources and he basically told me to chill out: Although rear-facing seats are safer, dangerous accidents are uncommon, and forward-facing seats aren’t unsafe.


Once you’ve got your car seat, there’s the question of where and how you should install it. I’m not going to give installation pointers — you really don’t want to get them from me — but here are some general thoughts. The middle rear seat is actually the safest: Kids who ride there are 43 percent less likely to sustain injuries in a crash compared to kids riding on either side. But keep in mind that you’ll have to secure a middle seat using a seat belt, not LATCH, because middle seats don’t have LATCH anchors. (Rest assured, experts say: Seat belts work just as well as LATCH.) Speaking of LATCH, though, recommendations are changing. You should either weigh your car seat or contact your seat manufacturer to find out how much your model weighs; once your kid’s weight plus the weight of the seat exceeds 65 pounds, start securing the car seat with seat belts instead of LATCH. And if you do use a seat belt to secure your seat, you should still attach the top tether on your car seat to the rear LATCH anchor, as this keeps the seat top from flying forward during a crash. But never, ever attach a car seat using the side LATCH clamps and the seat belt. Is your head spinning yet?


I lied. I am going to give you one pointer on installation. If you have any trouble with it, or even if you don’t, there are more than 4,000 locations around the U.S. that will check and fix your car seat installation for free. Confident that you did it right? Don’t be. When Mark Zonfrillo — the leader of Child Road Traffic Safety Research at the Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia Center for Child Injury Research and Prevention — needed to install a car seat for his daughter, he didn’t trust himself. You read that right: A man who studies car seats for a living was not confident enough to install his daughter’s car seat. (Why do car seats have to be so intractable? Part of the problem is that back seat designs vary — so there is no “one size fits all” way to install them, and manuals have to cover all the bases. Sometimes, apparently, you even need to use pool noodles to get the angles right.) “This is how challenging the process is,” Zonfrillo says. “Despite having the vehicle manual, the car seat manual and being in the business, I still wanted to have someone else — who has done this many more times than I have, and who knows the nuances and details — do it.” Kids trump pride. Always.