Throughout the years, high-performance sports cars have remained
popular for automotive enthusiasts with the need for speed.
These cars offer so much horsepower at a relatively attainable
price that they lure young men like moths to a flame. Like those
moths, some of the young sports car drivers don't survive the
experience.
Consumers Union, the non-profit publisher of Consumer Reports, has
ranked what it claims are the four “deadliest” cars of all time:
"The Camaro, the Corvette, the Firebird, and the Mustang, all have
large engines, appeal to a young demographic, and are relatively
cheap for the performance you get," says David Champion, director
of the Automotive Testing Division for Consumers Union.
When the Insurance Institute for Highway Safety (IIHS) began
looking at occupant death rates (tracking started in 1984), sports
cars had nearly twice the occupant death rates of the “average”
car.
According to the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration,
the death rates in all cars, including sports cars, have been
steadily declining as manufacturers make adjustments and
incorporate new safety features. The IIHS points out; however, the
death rates in sports cars by comparison to all other vehicles
have remained relatively stable.
"You have to remember that today's Nissan Sentra would have been
considered an exotic Italian sports car measured up against early
Corvettes and Mustangs," says Champion.
None of the muscle cars of the 1950s and 1960s had air bags,
antilock brakes, crumple zones, electronic traction control,
three-point seat belts, or any of the other safety features of
today's high-performance cars.
So what separates the sports cars of any era from their more
modest brethren? A combination of power, price, and a style of
driving that isn't much changed from the day the first Corvettes
rolled off of the assembly line in 1953, according to Kim
Hazelbaker, a senior vice president of the IIHS.
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