The NHTSA FMVSS Cutoff, And How It Compared to a Star Rating

The NHTSA FMVSS Cutoff, And How It Compared to a Star Rating

 

When the NHTSA 35-mph crash test began in 1979, it was graded on a “pass/fail” scheme. A vehicle “passed” if its HIC was under 1,000 and chest G’s less than 60 for both occupants. Later, this cutoff was used to establish a minimum front crash safety standard: from 1982-1997, vehicles had to pass this threshold for both occupants in a 30-mph crash test, conducted with seat belts or “passive restraints” (often airbags). 

As it turns out, the 1000/60 threshold subdivides the 3-star rating. A vehicle that passes gets either a 5-star or a 4-star rating, a vehicle that fails gets a 2-star or a 1-star rating, and a vehicle near the line gets a 3-star rating. A 3-star rating indicates a severe injury risk of 21-35%. 

In practice, a vehicle that barely passed (right at a 1,000 HIC and 60 chest G’s) would be right at the minimum cut-off of a 3-star rating, whereas a vehicle that barely failed on one parameter could still get a high-end 3-star rating if the other parameter was well below the critical value. 

Theoretically, a vehicle could get a 4-star rating if the HIC exceeded 1,000, but the margin was extremely slim and in practice this was never achieved. A HIC of approximately 1,030 on its own would put the severe injury risk above 20%, and thus the vehicle in the 3-star range. 

The occupants that “passed” with the highest injury risk that I have found were the drivers of the 1979 Oldsmobile Cutlass Supreme coupe and 1992 Chevy S-10. Both had a 33% risk, near the worst of the 3-star range. The Oldsmobile had a HIC of 998 with 58 chest G’s and the S-10 had a HIC of 990 with 59 chest G’s. Both narrowly cleared the cutoff for both head and chest.

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On the flip side were the passengers of the 1994 Pontiac Trans Sport, 1980 Datsun 200SX, and 1981 Ford Escort. These three had a 22% risk. The Pontiac and Datsun had matching HICs and chest G’s: HIC 1,003, chest G’s 44. The Escort had a HIC of 1,011 with 40 chest G’s. Although these vehicles narrowly failed due to HIC, their risk was still a third lower than the worst passing vehicles, which effectively had the same HICs with much higher chest injury risk. The 1993 Lexus GS300, with 61 chest G’s but a HIC of only 369, had a 23% injury risk and was the “safest” vehicle to fail on chest injury. 

It has been noted in more recent years that chest compression is a more reliable measure of potential chest injury than chest G’s, but these are the injury measures as initially recorded. Higher chest G’s usually loosely correlate to higher chest compressions, anyway.