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2015 Ford F-150 gets mixed crash test results

 
The four-door 2015 Super Crew version, at top, got top ratings in all tests. But the Super Cab, with a smaller rear door and back seat, did poorly in a small-front overlap test, which slams 25 percent of the front of the truck into a barrier at 40 mph.
The four-door 2015 Super Crew version, at top, got top ratings in all tests. But the Super Cab, with a smaller rear door and back seat, did poorly in a small-front overlap test, which slams 25 percent of the front of the truck into a barrier at 40 mph.
Published July 30, 2015

DETROIT — Ford's new aluminum-sided F-150 pickup delivered mixed results in new crash tests by the insurance industry, and the damaged trucks cost more to repair than steel-bodied ones.

The four-door Super Crew version of the 2015 F-150 got top ratings in all five of the crash tests performed by the Insurance Institute for Highway Safety. For now, it is the only full-size truck on the market with the institute's "Top Safety Pick" rating.

But the Super Cab version, which has a smaller rear door and back seat, did poorly in a small-front overlap test, which slams 25 percent of the front of the truck into a barrier at 40 mph.

The Insurance Institute also said it took longer for a local Ford dealer to repair the aluminum truck than an older steel one, and the aluminum parts cost more. The institute said the repair costs were 26 percent higher for the aluminum-bodied truck.

In a statement, Ford said the new truck is the "safest F-150 ever" and noted that it has the government's highest five-star safety rating. But the company said it will make a design change in the 2016 model year to improve the crash performance of the Super Cab and Regular Cab models.

Ford said the Super Crew, which got the top safety award, accounts for 83 percent of all F-150 sales. The Super Cab makes up about 12 percent and the Regular Cab accounts for 5 percent.

Ford spokesman Mike Levine also said independent consultants have shown that average repair costs for the new truck are less than for the old truck.

The results are a key test for Ford, which switched from steel to aluminum for the body of the truck late last year. The switch makes the truck lighter and nimbler and saves fuel, but it was risky, since the F-150 is the first mass-market vehicle to make such a change. The F-150 has been the bestselling vehicle in the United States for more than three decades.

David Zuby, the IIHS's chief research officer, said the organization tested the F-150 first because there is so much interest in the aluminum body. Competitors from Chevrolet, Toyota and others will be tested this fall, he said.

Zuby said the aluminum on the F-150 was strong and safe and performed well. Differences in the steel frame under the aluminum resulted in the different test outcomes. The Super Crew version had extra, hornlike pieces of steel fitted to the front of the frame to help the vehicle absorb the force of the small overlap crash. The Super Cab and the two-door Regular Cab — which the institute didn't test — don't have those extra pieces of steel, but will get them in 2016 versions.

The Super Cab truck got "good" ratings on four other tests, including roof strength, side impact and a moderate frontal test, which hits a larger portion of the vehicle into a deformable barrier that's meant to replicate another vehicle. But in the small overlap test, the front compartment crumpled and the crash dummy's head missed the side air bags and hit the instrument panel.

Ford's trucks didn't get the institute's highest safety rating — "Top Safety Pick Plus" — because they don't have automatic braking systems to prevent collisions. They do have a front collision warning system, but it doesn't have automatic braking.