All posts by Mike

New Jersey Child Restraint Law Change: Rear Facing Until 2!

evo2At its heart, this blog is about advocacy: for safer and more sustainable transportation for everyone. Sometimes that means discussing safer car seats. Other times it means discussing safer cars, safer infrastructure, or safer alternatives to driving altogether. And sometimes it means discussing best practices that make driving safer for our youngest passengers, including extended rear facing and extended harnessing. This entry is about such a law in New Jersey.

Governor Chris Chrstie in New Jersey signed a bill on May 7th, 2015, that amends and improves the child restraint law in New Jersey. Starting on September 1st, 2015, the following changes will take effect. I enjoy reading legal jargon and technical data, but not everyone does, so here’s what the updated law for child restraints, or car seats and booster seats, means for you in New Jersey in straight talk:

Rear-facing in New Jersey as of September 1st, 2015:

fllopKids under 2 who weigh under 30 pounds must travel in a rear-facing car seat that includes a 5-point harness. In other words, this means either an infant seat (the Kiddy Evolution Pro being the best example of one I’ve reviewed) or a convertible seat (the Clek Fllo and Diono Rainier are my favorites in this area). Keep in mind that the majority of babies outgrow most infant seats before they turn 2 (with a few exceptions, such as the Evolution Pro), and will need to use a rear-facing convertible seat to reach that age. However, if you start with a convertible seat, such as the Rainier or the Fllo when used with its infant insert, you can use the same seat from the day your child leaves the hospital until s/he is ready to forward face (which, ideally, won’t be before 4).

Kids between 2 and 3 must either rear-face in a car seat that includes a 5-point harness (in other words, an infant or a convertible seat), or must forward-face in an equivalent seat (in other words, a convertible or combination seat). The key point here is that you cannot place a child who is 2 or 3 years old in a booster unless the child already weighs 40 pounds. At this age range, my preferred car seats are still convertible seats, because they allow you to continue to rear-face, and I believe our kids should continue to rear-face until 4 if at all possible, the way they do in Sweden. However, if you’ve got to forward-face, combination seats are the next best choice, since they have booster modes you’ll be able to use in the future.

purplerainierKids between 4 and 7 who are under 57 inches tall, or under 4’9″, must either use a forward-facing car seat that includes a 5-point harness or a booster seat. This law does not include a weight limit, and only has to do with age and height. So does this mean that you can’t continue rear-facing even if you have a seat that would allow you to once your child turns 4?

The way the law is written, yes, but in practical conditions, no. You’re not going to get pulled over and arrested for continuing to rear-face if your little one fits within the height and weight requirements of your convertible seat. Seats like the Fllo, Foonf, Rainier, or Pacifica that include 50-pound rear-facing limits can often keep kids rear-facing into 5 years, which means those kids will continue to reap the benefits of the safest car seat configuration we know of.

If you are forward-facing by this point, however, the two best seats on the market are the Britax Frontier G1.1 and the Pinnacle G1.1. Interestingly enough, they’re also two of the best booster seats on the market, since they’re both combination seats. These seats have the height and weight limits necessary to take pretty much any child all the way through the front-facing years into the booster years and to the point where they no longer need to use car seats at all.

f900Kids between 8 and 17  are required to wear a seat belt that’s been properly adjusted and fastened. Again, this law describes the minimum legal requirement. Most children will not be ready to leave boosters until they’re at least 10 to 12 years old and can pass the 5-step test. In other words, for the first several years of this age range, the best options for kids are booster seats. High-back boosters are also better than backless boosters, as they offer side impact protection for the head, neck, and torso, which are the most important parts of the body. Seats like the Frontier and Pinnacle remain my top choices for the forward-facing and booster-years until children are ready for the adult seat belt.

When must children in New Jersey sit in the back or front seats?

Finally,while the law only requires children to sit in the back seat until they turn 8, children should sit in the back seat until they’re physically and psychologically mature enough to use the adult seat belt system, which again, typically won’t occur for most children until they are at least 10 to 12 years old.  Even at that point, it’s still safer for children to sit in the back for the same reason it’s safer for adults to sit in the back seat; it offers more protection than the front seat for frontal collisions as well as in side collisions.

Exceptions in New Jersey, full legal text, and ramifications for car seat laws in the United States

If you need to transport a child in a vehicle that doesn’t include rear seats, such as a two-seater convertible or a pickup truck with a standard cab, you can legally install a car seat in the front passenger seat. However, rear-facing car seats are not allowed in this position unless passenger front airbags are either turned off, disabled, or not present.

You can read the full legal text here. Overall, these are good new laws, although they’re still not up to where we should be in terms of best practices in rear-facing, forward-facing, or booster use. With these measures, with the rear-facing one being the most important, New Jersey becomes the first state in the United States to require rear-facing until 2. Hopefully other states follow suit, and the conversation can move toward encouraging extended-rear facing and harnessing across the country.

If you find the information on car safety, recommended car seats, and car seat reviews on this car seat blog helpful, you can shop through this Amazon link for any purchases, car seat-related or not. Canadians can shop through this link for Canadian purchases.

3 Across Installations: Which Car Seats Fit in a Nissan Rogue?

The Nissan Rogue, which is also known as the Nissan X-Trail overseas, is Nissan’s contribution to the burgeoning small SUV and crossover market in the United States. It’s meant to offer an affordable and stylish alternative to small SUVs like the Jeep PatriotHonda CR-V, Toyota RAV4, Subaru Forester, and Ford Escape. The newest generation features a bevy of impressive safety scores, side airbags, ESC, and even rudimentary frontal crash prevention systems in optional trims.

That’s all well and good, but what I was really interested in finding out when I borrowed one was how well the Rogue does as a 3 across car seater. The good news is that many of the usual suspects will still work in the initial generation. The bad news is that the current generation is no longer a 3-car-seat-compatible vehicle. Before getting into that, however, let’s take a look at best practices in car seat arrangements.

Car seat safety starts with rear-facing our little ones; it’s best for their soft spines and disproportionally large heads. I recommend you rear-face your infants, toddlers, and preschoolers for as long as possible (ideally until 4!), before forward-facing them in harnessed convertible or combination seats (ideally until 8!). Once they outgrow their harnessed seats, it’s best to keep them restrained in high-back boosters until they’re physically and psychologically ready to use adult seat belt systems (which typically happens between 10 and 12). These suggestions may take a bit of extra work, but they provide a lot of extra safety.

Keeping these ideas in mind, I set to work to find which infant, convertible, combination, and booster seats would work best in 3 across combinations in the Nissan Rogue. It’s my goal to make this list the most thorough on the Internet. If you find the list helpful when shopping for car seats, you can shop through my Amazon link below. I’ll add more seats as I test them over time.

You can access the complete 3 across guide for every vehicle here and the complete list of recommended seats here. The Canadian car seat guide is here. Vehicle images are courtesy of Wikipedia.

rogue-xtrail-publicdomain2014, 2015, 2016, 2017 Nissan Rogue

Guaranteed 3 across installations: None!

The current generation Nissan Rogue represents an unfortunate step backwards in car seat compatibility, as a reader kindly informed me that Nissan expressly forbids the use of a car seat in the center position in their 2015 Snugkids guide. This is likely to confuse a number of parents since the Rogue owner’s manual itself does not include such restrictions and goes so far as to show a center installed car seat on multiple pages. However, restrictions trump permissions, and on top of that, the Rogue also has significantly overlapping seat belts.

While overlapping seat belts in and of themselves don’t automatically exclude a vehicle from 3 across capabilities (the Highlander has overlapping belts but is still a decent 3 across vehicle, for example), when the belts overlap to a significant degree (as in the current generation Corolla), 3 across becomes an impossibility for safety reasons. I’ve included 2 car seat arrangements that will work easily given the available space in the Rogue, but until Nissan corrects this, the Rogue will remain a 2-across vehicle.

Clek Fllo (x2).

Clek Foonf (x2).

Chicco KeyFit 30 (x2).

Graco Size4Me 65 (x2).

Graco Contender (x2).

Diono Radian / RXT (x2).

Combi Coccoro (x2).

Tips and Tricks:

The current generation of the Nissan Rogue is 183 inches long and 72 inches wide, which means you’ll have a good amount of space for any 2 car seats, though not 3 (see above).

rogue-2008-publicdomain2008, 2009, 2010, 2011, 2012, 2013 Nissan Rogue

Guaranteed 3 across installations:

Clek Fllo (x3).

Clek Foonf (x3).

Chicco KeyFit 30 (x2).

Diono Radian / RXT (x3).

Combi Coccoro (x3).

Diono Radian / RXT, Combi Coccoro, Evenflo Triumph.

Tips and Tricks:

The initial generation of the Nissan Rogue is 183 inches long and 71 inches wide, or 1 inch narrower than the current generation. It’s still a decent size and comparable to what you’d find in small cars or other small SUVs. Use your seat belts for all 3 seats to get the most room out of that back seat area. This generation of the Rogue is actually better than the current generation since this generation, unlike the current, actually permits 3 across installations.

If you find the information on car safety, recommended car seats, and car seat reviews on this car seat blog helpful, you can shop through this Amazon link for any purchases, car seat-related or not. Canadians can shop through this link for Canadian purchases.

Mamas & Papas Urbo2 Stroller Review: Light, Stylish.

urbo2 - 1Whenever I (Susie) get a chance to review high-end strollers, I often end up comparing them to our Bumblerides (the Indie and Indie Twin). However, after having had the chance to review the Mamas & Papas Armadillo Flip recently, I had to get a closer look at the Urbo2, by the same company. A friend of mine recently bought hers online and I convinced her to let me borrow it for the weekend. It’s stunningly attractive.

To help you conceptualize it, it’s basically a compact luxury stroller, and it competes with other high-end single seat reversible strollers like the Stokke Scoot Stroller V2Mamas & Papas Armadillo Flip, UPPAbaby Cruz, and UPPAbaby Vista. In short, it’s a pretty cool stroller. Here are the details.

Quick Review of the 2015 Mamas & Papas Urbo2 Stroller

The 2015 Mamas & Papas Urbo2 is essentially a compact, lightweight, high-end stroller with retro design flourishes and a reversible seat that reclines deeply enough to be used with newborns. It’s the kind of stroller that turns heads when you go by, because it looks good.

The reversible seat is a roomy and padded one, and the Urbo2 can easily be turned into a travel system by fitting an infant car seat into it (and Mike has reviewed a ton of those here). Something I love about the Urbo2 is that it’s one of a few strollers on the market with a matching bassinet option. I’ll have more details on this in a bit.

Changes in the Urbo2 compared to the original Urbo include the addition of front-wheel suspension to smooth out the ride on the small wheels, as well as the addition of a bumper bar that’s covered in (faux) leather. The frame is classy, shiny, and delightfully narrow, and because of how little space the stroller takes up from one side to the next, it’s quite maneuverable, even in crowded environments. You can fold it up rather easily to stuff it into a subcompact-sized trunk (and if you’re curious about fitting 3 car seats into small or big cars, check out the 3 across guides later on), and the Urbo2 also features a much larger canopy with much better ventilation.

Besides all of this, even though looks aren’t the be-all, end-all of things, they do matter, and the Urbo2 is a good-looking stroller. It got a lot of attention when we tried it out at IKEA this weekend, although I barely noticed since I was admiring it so much myself. It feels good to push, to run your hands over, and it’s not even that much work to lift, as it weighs just 20 pounds.

Overall, I’d give the Urbo2 5 out of 5 stars. If you’re looking for an urban or city stroller that you’ll have no trouble picking out in a crowd, this is the stroller to get. The fact that you can pair it with an infant seat or a bassinet makes it very newborn friendly, which also increases the amount of time you can spend using it, whether when you’re going to the mall, the park, or simply around your neighborhood. 

The main drawback to the stroller, in my opinion, is the wheel size; I’d like them to be larger. I’d also like to be able to fold the Urbo2 up even when the seat is reversed and facing me. Besides that, it’s a solid stroller.The cheapest price I’ve found so far for the 2015 Mamas & Papas Urbo2 is here on Amazon, which includes free shipping, free returns, and no sales tax, depending on your state.

Buy the 2015 Mamas & Papas Urbo2 stroller on Sale at Amazon.

Pros of the 2015 Mamas & Papas Urbo2.

urbo2 - 2Large canopy. Mamas & Papas, like Baby Jogger, knows how important it is to make a full coverage canopy. I love that about them. The Urbo2 canopy can extend fully to the stroller’s bumper bar, which means your little one doesn’t need to feel the sun if s/he doesn’t want to.

Something else I like in the canopy is that the included peekaboo window is large enough for you to get a good view of your baby, yet also opened and closed through a magnetic closure. This means you won’t risk waking up your baby when sneaking a peek during a nap. If this is your first baby, trust me on this. You don’t wake a sleeping baby.

Reversible seat. The reversible seat is one of the best inventions in stroller history, along with the bassinet. To put it simply, I like being able to see my baby sometimes when walking him, and this makes it easy. The seat is 12″ wide and 24″ tall as measured from the bottom of the seat to the top of the canopy. Being able to see your little one wherever you go while you’re on your first walks after the delivery is an awesome thing. Well, depending on how sore you are, you might not feel awesome at first, but believe me…it gets better.

urbo2 - 4The seat is plush, comfy, and thanks to its nearly flat one-hand recline, you can make it flat enough to use with a newborn straight from the hospital. The seat is designed to be used from birth until 50 pounds. Naturally, it includes a padded 5-point harness to keep your little one snug and safe wherever you go. I can’t remember the last time I saw a stroller without one, but I figure it’s always good to mention. And even though it might sound shallow, I do enjoy how the fabric print on the padding matches the print on the canopy. It’s little touches like that that make the Urbo 2 stand out.

Beneath the seat is an adjustable foot rest that you can lift and drop, creating a pretty flat surface for your little one if that’s your goal. I’ve found it handy for quick diaper changes at the zoo when Mike and I didn’t want to brave the bathrooms.

urbo2 - 3Adjustable handle bar with runaway strap. To me an adjustable handle bar is about as basic as an adjustable seat height in a car; it should be in every stroller. Mike and I have different heights and it just makes sense to make strollers that accommodate those kinds of differences. It telescopes from 38″ above the ground to 41.” The handle bar feels good in my hands and has the same leather-like material that covers up the bumper bar. A runaway strap was added to the bar with the Urbo2; it’s handy as a way of holding on to the stroller if you’re jogging, although I wouldn’t try that with this stroller.

urbo2 - 2Smooth tires and all-wheel suspension. The tires on the Urbo2 are made of a hard rubber and have a 6″ diameter in the front and a 7″ diameter in the back. You can swivel or lock the front wheels, and a quick release button is now included on the front wheels to make them easier to store or clean. The rims are silver-toned and stylish, and work well with the chrome frame and all wheel suspension. The previous Urbo had suspension only on the rear wheels, so this is a step up.

The Urbo2 is easy to steer, even when it’s fully loaded with a baby and a basket full of diapers. We tried it out in the Woodfield Mall in Chicago (well, the suburbs, anyway), and it performed admirably. That said, this definitely isn’t an all-terrain stroller; you’ll want to stick to sidewalks, grass, pavement, and dirt trails at the most if you don’t want to deal with bumps.

The parking brakes are red and by the rear wheels; you can activate them with your feet, shoes, or flip-flops without trouble.

urbo2-8Compact fold, included rain cover, included insect net.  The Urbo2 has a two-handed compact fold that’s pretty easy to pull off. You turn the seat so it’s forward-facing first. Next, you push the side buttons and collapse the stroller until the automatic lock clicks in. When folded, the stroller is 11″ tall, 21″ wide, and 33″ long, which is quite small. Technically the fold is a standing one, but it’s not a stable one, so I wouldn’t rely on it.

I’m always a fan of free goodies thrown in my stroller companies, especially when spending a good amount on the stroller to begin with. The Urbo2 includes a free rain cover that’s been redesigned since the original Urbo. I turned the hose on mine in the garden and it kept my phone dry in the seat, so I’m calling that a win. They also throw in an insect net, which, by the way, works even better as a shade for sleep.

urbo2 - 5Optional bassinet, optional footmuff, travel systems. I’m a big believer in bassinets for infant-friendly stroller transport. Unlike travel systems, which rely on car seats, which you aren’t supposed to leave infants in whenever possible, bassinets are actually good for your baby, since they allow your baby movement and the ability to lie flat, which is the best lying position for a newborn or any other baby who hasn’t yet developed head control. The optional bassinet looks great and is large enough to be functional. It basically turns the Urbo2 into a pram, which means your baby can comfortably and safely sleep while you leave together for a walk, and it also means you get to see your little one while you’re out together.

urbo2 - 6Another neat optional accessory for the Urbo2 is a footmuff. It’s basically a giant sleeping bag for your baby, and yes, it matches the rest of the fabric print. It feels soft outside and inside and is also wind and water resistant, making it a good choice for keeping your baby nice and toasty when out for a brisk winter walk.

Finally, the traditional travel system is still definitely an option with the Urbo2. You simply pop out the included seat and insert the infant seat. You’ll also need an adapter, but once you’ve got it, you can use the Urbo2 with a range of seats, including the Primo Viaggio, Cybex Aton 2, Mico Max 30, and other infant seats Mike has reviewed here.

Buy the 2015 Mamas & Papas Urbo2 stroller on Sale at Amazon.

Cons of the 2015 Mamas & Papas Urbo2 stroller.

Wheel size. The wheels are easily the biggest drawback to the Urbo2. They work well for their size, and I definitely had no problem using the stroller as designed on intended surfaces, but if you’re planning on doing a lot of park or trail exploration, you’ll want to look for an all-terrain stroller instead, like the Indie or Indie 4 if you want a built in bassinet.

Specifications of and Warranty for the 2015 Mamas & Papas Urbo2 stroller.

The Urbo2 is 22″ wide, 39″ long, and weighs 20 pounds. It can be used with a child from birth until s/he weighs 50 pounds. The handle bar is adjustable between 38″ and 41″ while the seat offers 24″ of height.

Mamas & Papas provides a 2-year warranty for the Urbo2. The clock starts ticking on the purchase date. You can read more information about the warranty here.

Where to Buy the 2015 Mamas & Papas Urbo2 stroller.

Whenever possible, I buy my strollers, car seats, and other baby goodies on Amazon, since their prices tend to be the lowest I come across. They also sweeten the pot with free shipping and free returns, and you typically don’t pay sales tax with them unless you’re in a state that charges it.

As far as high-end single seat reversible strollers go, the Mamas & Papas Urbo2 is a solid addition to a field that includes alternatives like the Mamas & Papas Armadillo Flip, Stokke Scoot V2UPPAbaby Cruz, and UPPAbaby Vista. It’s quite possibly the most attractive stroller on the market today, and that’s saying something, considering how much style has come into the stroller market in the last few years.

You can buy the Urbo2 here in Navy Blue, Chestnut Tweed, Donna Wilson Foxleaf (the color I used in this review), Black, Teal, Atticus, and Camel. You can buy the bassinet in Chestnut Tweed here or in Donna Wilson here.You can buy a Primo Viaggio car seat adapter here and a Maxi-Cosi adapter here. Canadians can buy the Urbo2 and a range of bassinets here.

If you find the information on car safety, recommended car seats, and car seat reviews on this car seat blog helpful, you can shop through this Amazon link for any purchases, car seat-related or not. Canadians can shop through this link for Canadian purchases.

Clek Infant-Thingy Infant Insert Review: Newborn Safe!

Clek Infant-Thingy Infant Insert – What’s the big deal?

clek infant insertIt’s no secret that the Clek Fllo and Clek Foonf are two of my favorite convertible seats on the market, with the Clek Fllo being, in my opinion, the best high-end convertible seat out there, just as the Kiddy Evolution Pro is the best infant seat on the market. That said, the Fllo and Foonf suffer one great flaw: they can’t be used until your baby weighs at least 14 pounds. And if that weren’t bad enough, your baby also needs to be able to sit upright without help.

In other words, most parents can’t start out with the Fllo or Foonf because most babies aren’t going to be able to sit up alone and cross the 14 pound barrier until they’re at least 6 months old. This is where the Infant-thingy comes in. It sounds kooky, the way everything by Clek does, but, much like most things Clek does, it’s pretty awesome. It’s basically an infant insert that lets you fit newborns into the Fllo or Foonf, as long as they weigh at least 5 pounds. And in typical Clek sense, it’s designed stylishly and made to be easily cleanable, since you know your baby’s going to make a mess sooner or later.

Buy the Clek Infant-Thingy Infant Insert on Sale at Amazon here.

Clek Infant-Thingy Infant Insert – Fast Facts

The Infant-Thingy can be used exclusively in the Fllo and Foonf when your baby weighs between 5 and 22 pounds and is between 19″ and 33″ in height. The insert can only be used while rear-facing, and it must be used until your baby weighs at least 11 pounds. The crotch strap is 3″ and set to the rear position slot. The bottom harness slot is 9″ high when used with the body support. The head support includes a range of energy-absorbing materials, and the included manual is designed to overrule the Fllo and Foonf manuals.

Using the Clek Infant-Thingy Infant Insert

Head rest removal

The first thing to do with the infant insert doesn’t involve the insert at all; it involves the head rest on your Foonf or Fllo: you’ve got to remove it. You do this by lifting the head rest until it’s in its highest position, and then using your troubleshooting tool (it’s on the back side of the car seat) to get the head rest out. The tool is designed to fit in a tiny hole on the front part of the right head rest guide. A paper clip will also work if you don’t have the tool handy. This is all summarized nicely in the instruction manual for the infant insert. Don’t throw the head rest away, as it’ll be necessary once your child is a bit older again.

Head Support

You need to use the head support that comes with the infant insert until your child weighs at least 14 pounds, is at least 25″ tall, and can sit up without help. You can use the head support beyond this point, but you can’t stop using it before this point. Once you remove it, you need to put the car seat’s head rest back on, as it serves the same function as the Infant-thingy’s head support.

You can tell when your baby should stop using the infant insert head support and start using the Fllo or Foonf’s head support by visual inspection. When his or her head is above the highest part of the infant head support, it’s time for the regular head support.

When you first install the head support, do so 3 slots above the bottom set of slots. Keep in mind that as you move up your harness slots to keep up with your growing child, you’ll do the same with the infant head support to keep it 3 slots above the harness slots you’re using.

clek infant insert blackBody Support

You need to use the body support if your child weighs between 5 and 11 pounds, but you can keep on using it until your child weighs 22 pounds. You’re also required to use it if you have the car seat’s built in head rest installed and if your child weighs less than 14 pounds, is less than 25″ in height, and can’t sit up without help.

Something neat about the Infant-thingy that you might notice is that the body support is thicker than the head support. The purpose of this is to keep your child’s head tilted a bit back in order to keep his or her airway open. This, by the way, is also why achieving an appropriate recline is a big deal when rear-facing children in car seats. Pretty neat, right?

Other things to keep in mind about the body support is that you’ve got to use the inner crotch strap position. However, if you have to use the longer length, you can. And you’ve also got to keep the belly pad, since it’s required to be used along with the harness buckle.

There are a pair of hip supports that are designed to sit between your child’s hips and the lower lap straps. The lap straps are supposed to go over the hip supports as designed from Clek, so don’t worry about the typical rule of avoiding padding between your child and the car seat harness.

Harness Slots

Finally, it’s worth taking a look at whether the Infant-thingy does its job. What’s it’s job? To help newborns safely fit the Fllo and the Foonf, which weren’t designed out of the box to fit newborns. The minimum requirements for those seats involve kids who weigh at least 14 pounds, who are at least 25″ tall, and who can sit upright without help.  So where does the infant insert change things?

Well, even though the general rule in rear-facing seats is that harness slots need to either be at the shoulder height or below the shoulder height of the child, Clek has tested the infant insert and determined it’s okay for the harness to be above your child’s shoulders even at the lowest slots of the harness if your child is using the infant insert, as long as your child weighs at least 5 pounds. Keep in mind that once your baby starts growing past the lowest harness slots, you’ll want to go back to following the standard rear-facing harness rule.

Buy the Clek Infant-Thingy Infant Insert on Sale at Amazon here.

Why Buy the Clek Infant-Thingy Infant Insert?

The Fllo and Foonf are two of my absolute favorite convertible car seats because they’re two of a very small number of seats that allow you to rear-face children (which is the safest position for our little ones) until they reach 50 pounds, and they’re the only seats on the market that allow you to do it while being able to fit in 3 across positions in virtually every car sold in the United States.

The biggest drawback to these seats, however, is that they couldn’t be used with most infants until they were at least 6 months old. Thanks to the Infant-Thingy infant insert, these seats have now become a very real option for parents interested in using the same seat to rear-face from birth until 4 or 5. I love this!

With this change, there’s no doubt in my mind that the Fllo and Foonf are the two best convertible car seats out there. You can leave the infant seat behind entirely if you want, and just start out with one of these. I wholeheartedly recommend the Fllo, the Foonf, and the Infant-thingy infant insert. You can buy the Clek Fllo here, the Foonf here, and the Infant-Thingy infant insert here. Canadians can buy the Fllo here, the Foonf here, and the insert here.

If you find the information on car safety, recommended car seats, and car seat reviews on this car seat blog helpful, you can shop through this Amazon link for any purchases, car seat-related or not. Canadians can shop through this link for Canadian purchases.

Side Impact Crash Protection: The Safest Cars in 2015

ava0Among front, side, and rear-impact collisions, side impacts are the most likely to be fatal. These are the t-bones, the broadside crashes that occur at intersections and more rarely when vehicles skid sideways into the paths of oncoming vehicles. They’re much more likely to be fatal for the basic reason that there’s a lot less material between you and the 3,200 lbs (the average passenger vehicle weight today in the US) of metal and plastic careening toward you at 30, 40, or 50 miles per hour.

Given that a big part of this blog has to do with analyzing crashes themselves and seeing what we can learn from them, I write about these crashes every so often, and they are very, very difficult to survive. Here’s a fatal example involving a Prius, and here’s another involving an Optima. Here’s one involving a Sequoia, and here’s one involving a Fusion. All of the crash analyses I linked to involve vehicles with side airbags covering both the head and torso regions, and 3 of the 4 analyses involved vehicles that received “good” side crash test scores by the IIHS.

It’s one thing to test well, but it’s another thing to survive these crashes when the forces involved go far, far beyond the amounts tested in labs. This is a problem, and it’s one that can be tackled in a number of ways.

Solving the side impact problem: weight and speed

kia1Personally, I’d be in favor of much stricter weight limits in passenger vehicles in the US, as well as on much stricter enforcement of speed limits and general lowering of speed limits throughout the US. The heavier a vehicle, the more likely it is to cause damage in a collision. The effects are even more pronounced with speeding, since kinetic energy increases with the square of velocity (KE = .5 * mass * velocity * velocity), rather than proportionally with mass. What that means is that a little bit of speeding can make a crash a lot more severe than a little bit of extra weight, given a particular speed and weight.

How to not die in a side impact collision

However, given the unlikelihood of convincing our lawmakers to put limits on the auto industry regarding vehicle weights or to put limits on our citizens by increasing the prevalence of speed cameras and the enforcement of speed limits, in today’s political climate in the US, unfortunately, the best ways to protect yourself and your loved ones from dying in t-bone collisions today are to either:

1.) Avoid driving (e.g., by using public transportation or by cycling or walking).

2.) Limit driving (by the same measures above and by combining trips).

3.) Drive the  most side-impact-resistant vehicles possible.

The first two points are worth many posts in themselves, but today’s post will be on the third point, and specifically related to choosing the safest cars for side impacts currently available in the US in 2015. I’ll write a similar post for minivans and another for SUVs in the near future.

Determining which cars are the safest for side impact collisions by structural integrity (crush distance)

The methodology behind this list is simple. The IIHS has the best widespread side impact test protocol in the United States, in my opinion, so let’s see what we can learn from it.

Essentially, a 3,300 lb deformable barrier with the height and shape of an SUV is rammed into the driver’s side of a tested vehicle at 31 mph. A pair of dummies, each representing either a 5th percentile woman or 12-year-old child are strapped into the driver’s seat and the driver’s side rear seat. Data is recorded and analyzed along a range of parameters, including forces against the head, chest, shoulders, hips, and legs in the dummies, as well as the amount of deformation within the vehicle itself. This is where I’m most interested. This is the “structure and safety cage” subscore in the side impact test.

Every vehicle deforms to some degree when rammed with such energy (approximately 143.7 KJ, or what you get when you multiply .5 * 1496.8kg * 13.8 m/s ^ 2); the less the B-frame crushes into the driver’s seat area, the more time and space the restraint systems like the seat belt and airbags have to protect you in a crash. The B-pillar deformation structural rating is based on the maximum amount of crush of the B-pillar to the center of the driver’s seat, measured in centimeters.

The IIHS has various thresholds for what constitute a “poor” maximum level of intrusion (0 cm or worse between the B-pillar and the center of the driver’s seat), a “marginal” level (0-5 cm), an “acceptable” level (5-12.5 cm), and a “good” level (> 12.5 cm). The full details, including those of how the test is conducted and of what the guidelines are for rating injury measures, are here. From there, you can read that the threshold for a “good” structural score is at least 12.5 cm of space between the center of the driver’s seat and the crushed-in B-panel.

To me, that’s where we’re just getting started.

The greater that crush space, given a vehicle’s overall “good” score for the side impact test and presence of airbags, the safer the vehicle. Even though a vehicle might score “good” overall on the side impact test, would you rather sit in one with a 3 cm crush space or one with a 30 cm crush space?

That’s what this list is based on. Every cm between you and a life-ending amount of energy is a life-preserving cm of survival space. Let’s see who’s doing the best job at it right now. For brevity’s sake, I’ll list the top 10 cars I could find. All data is accurate as of July 2015, and all images are courtesy of Wikipedia.

The 11 safest cars for side impact collisions in 2015

e350-publicdomain24 cm – 2010-2015 Mercedes-Benz E-Class sedan (e.g., E 350).

This is the safest mainstream car in the United States today when it comes to side impact crash survival, based on its country-leading 24 cm of crush protection. No other car does a better job, and as of this writing, only one other vehicle does any better, out of all minivans and SUVs currently on the market: the BMW X5. After the X5, it’s only equaled by one other vehicle in the United States: another Mercedes, the GLK. It’s worth noting as well that in the ’05-’08 model years, the E-Class Sedan was estimated to have a zero driver death rate by the IIHS, as a nod to the overall strong track record of this vehicle and its drivers. That previous generation of the E-Class sedan led to this generation.

You can read my full 3 across guide to the E-Class here.

outback - 2015 - publicdomain22 cm – 2015 Subaru Outback.

Hot on the heels of the E-Class sedan comes the latest Outback from Subaru. Subaru continues to impress throughout their line, and their marketing themselves as a younger, fresher, and outdoorsier version of Volvo is paying off, as well as their obvious attention to safety in models like the Outback. It’s worth noting that the ’10-’11 Outback had a DDR of 6, as I wrote about here. That Outback is the generation prior to this Outback.

You can read my full 3 across guide to the Outback here.

golf - mk7 - publicdomain22 cm – 2015, 2016 Volkswagen Golf / GTI.

The Golf scores marvelously here, tied with the Outback as the 2nd-most impact resistant car on the list. What makes it even more impressive is the fact that it’s neither a large nor a mid-sized car, but a small one. The Golf is available in several flavors, but all feature good safety scores, including the side impact frontal crash test score, and all feature a class-leading 22 cm of side impact intrusion protection.

You can read my full 3 across car seat guide to the Golf / GTI here.

500l - 2014 - publicdomain21 cm – 2014, 2015 Fiat 500L. 

The Fiat 500L is a surprise entry here as the 4th-most structurally sound car I could find, but it was certainly a welcome find, especially considering the fact that the 2015 500L was branded with a poor small overlap score. Fiat will have to step up their game in that area.

c-class-w205-publicdomainb20.5 cm – 2015 Mercedes-Benz C-Class sedan (e.g., C 400).

Mercedes makes another of several entries in the safest side impact car rankings with the C-Class sedan, which is essentially a smaller version of their E-class sedan. The 2009-2015 models of the C-Class sedan all feature 20.5 cm of intrusion resistance at the B-pillar in the IIHS test, an incredibly impressive streak. The ’08-’11 C-Class sedan also featured driver death rates of 7 and 10 in the 4WD and 2WD models respectively, which I wrote about here.

You can read my full C-Class 3 across guide here.

c207 - 2014 - cc019.5 cm – 2010-2015 Mercedes-Benz E-Class coupe.

The E-Class coupe is closely related to the E-Class sedan above, although it does not test quite as well in resisting side impact intrusion. Another strike it has against it is that coupe models of a vehicle almost always have higher driver death rates than the sedans, simply because they’re driven more recklessly.

You can read my full 3 across guide to the E-Class here.

legacy-2015-publicdomain19.5 cm – 2015 Subaru Legacy.

The Subaru Legacy is closely related to the Outback above, which is essentially a wagonized conversion of the Legacy. Both vehicles share the same small overlap score and front moderate overlap score, despite differing in side impact tests. The previous generation of the Legacy (’10-’11) also joined the E-Class sedan, the A6, and the A4 as the only cars to ever make the zero list for driver deaths per the IIHS. That’s as safe as it gets.

You can read my full 3 across guide to the Legacy here.

5-series - 2011 - publicdomain19 cm – 2011-2015 BMW 5 Series (e.g., 528i).

The BMW 5 Series is an unsurprising entry here, given BMW’s longstanding commitment to driver safety alongside Mercedes. The ’11 to’15 5 series suffers from a marginal small overlap score, but BMW can be expected to increase the performance of the next iteration of the 5 series in the future.

You can read my full 3 across guide to the 5 Series here.

a6-2012-publicdomain19 cm – 2012-2016 Audi A6.

Tied with the BMW 5 Series is the current generation Audi A6, another unsurprising entry given Audi and Volkswagen’s commitment to driver safety (though not driver emissions) over the last several years. The ’05-’08 iteration of the Audi A6, along with the equivalent generation of the Mercedes E-Class sedan, was the first car to be estimated by the IIHS to have had a driver death rate of zero. That generation of the A6 immediately preceded this generation of the A6.

You can read my full 3 across car seat guide to the A6 here.

tlx - 2015 - publicdomain19 cm – 2015 Acura TLX.

Honda / Acura makes their debut on the safest side impact car list with the all-new TLX, which is an update to the TL and TSX cars of previous years. If it’s anything like its ancestors, it will have strong bones, as the TL and TSX had two of the lowest estimated driver death rates in the most-recent IIHS study, at 5 and 7 respectively. I’m expecting great things from the TLX.

You can read my full TLX, TL, and TSX 3 across guides here.

dart - 2013 - publicdomain19 cm – 2013-2015 Dodge Dart.

Rounding out the list is the current generation Dodge Dart, which joins the Fiat as the only other small car on the list and the second vehicle on the list from Fiat Chrysler. The Dodge Dart is also easily the most affordable vehicle on the list, and with its bevy of good safety scores all around, I look forward to seeing how it performs in the next driver death rate study.

You can read my full 3 across guide to the Dart here.

More broadly, the presence of multiple Mercedes-Benz, Subarus, Volkswagens, and Fiat Chryslers in the top list of intrusion-resistant cars is clear evidence of the commitment to safety present in these companies, and will surely bring good feelings to anyone buying a recent model-year vehicle from any of those brands.

How to choose a car to keep you safe in side impact crashes

In conclusion, what does this all mean? Should you sell your current car and buy one of the above immediately? Is every other car on the road a rolling deathtrap waiting to be impaled, with you sitting in the driver’s seat like a human shish kabob? Well, not exactly. There are a number of other great vehicles that I didn’t include on the list to save time that were literally only a centimeter or two away from appearing on the list. The 2015 Chrysler 200 sedan, for example, had a quite impressive intrusion score of 17.5 cm. Similarly, the 2015 Fiat 500 and 2014-2015 Maserati Ghibli clock in at 17.5 cm, although you’ll pay a lot more to get the last model. There are also a number of recognized automakers like Toyota, Honda, and Volvo whose vehicles didn’t make the cutoff simply because I was only interested in the top vehicles for this post.

The takeaway message is that it’s worth looking beyond the overall “good” score and diving into the structural integrity subscore when searching for safe cars for this particular kind of crash. Of course, you’ll start with looking for airbags and the overall “good” score, but beyond that, if you’re choosing between two vehicles that seem good on paper, dive into this subscore and you might be surprised at what you find. And remember that just because a car isn’t anywhere near the top numbers on this list doesn’t mean it’s not safe. The older E-Class sedan I mentioned with the zero driver death rate didn’t even have a “good” overall score! It was “acceptable!” Furthermore, the “structure and safety cage” score was also “acceptable,” as it was 7.5 to 9 cm, depending on which year it was manufactured. And yet, because of its drivers, the overall safety of the vehicle, and a good amount of luck, no drivers in it died for several years.

We can’t control everything. The safest option is still not driving at all, followed by driving as little as possible. But if you’ve got to drive, drive safely, and do your best to choose a safe vehicle. To that end, my safe family vehicle analyses for cars and SUVs are worth reading.

I hope you enjoyed reading this as much as I enjoyed writing it. It’s exciting to see where we’re headed in car safety these days. I’ll have a followup article soon comparing minivan safety and other comparing SUV safety along the same metrics. Stay tuned, remember to avoid common mistakes parents make with car seats, and check out some 3 across car seat guides while you’re here.

If you find the information on car safety, recommended car seats, and car seat reviews on this car seat blog helpful, you can shop through this Amazon link for any purchases, car seat-related or not. Canadians can shop through this link for Canadian purchases.