- Joined
- Aug 12, 2010
- Messages
- 8,341
- Reaction score
- 730
- Location
- San Angelo, Texas
- My Car
- 1971 Mustang Mach 1
Yeah, I don't put much credence, if any at all, into those "Consumer Alert/Expose' " stories from the likes of 60 Minutes, Dateline, Consumer Reports, et al. I still remember the big debacle of NBC [Dateline?] rigging the side-saddle tanks on the Chevy pick-ups to explode, as well as Consumer Reports demanding the drivers get the Suzuki Samurai to roll over on camera (or at least up on two wheels)... no matter what it takes.As Gold Rush stated, it's a wonder all the wonderful people we've put in office in Washington haven't banned anything that doesn't meet present safety standards. The Big Three have all been in Sixty Minutes "Bulls Eye" at one time or another. What ever makes big news. I remember the fuel tank on the 73-87 Chevrolet pick up trucks was mounted on the outside the frame with only the quarter panel to protect it. Of course once the fires and explosion's resulting from accidents on that one made the evening news the Lawyers phones were ringing nonstop.
I know it means nothing to family's that have lost someone, but these cars met all the Government safety regulations at the time of manufacture. There are kits out now to place a safety barrier for cars like the 65-70 Mustang's and other cars with similar fuel tank set ups.
The poor ole Pinto. It really was a good car. America was learning something new about these new smaller cars. Packaging of components was more critical now that there was not as much room to put things as there was on Dad's big ole 65 Galaxie. "Crush" room just wasn't there any more. When hit from the rear at high impact, the tank was being pushed into the differential and the filler pipe was being pulled out of the tank. Mix in some hot exhaust and sparking metal being shredded...Another Sixty Minutes" special.
Ford did come out with a safety recall for the tanks. It added heavy shields, including the critical area in front of the tank, and a longer fuel filler pipe with improved retention so it would no longer pull out when the tank moved in an accident. They also had another campaign where they replaced the fuel cap with a better sealing one. The car continued to sell really well up to 1980 when it was replaced by the Escort.
I believe unless you have access to a army tank, no vehicle is going to be 100% safe. You see cars In NASCAR that are built with the latest in technology, including fuel cells, by teams with unlimited budgets....and you still see fires!!
Consumer Reports rated the mid-80s Pontiac Grand Ams as the absolute worst car on the road, safety-wise... "death trap" was one of their words, with verbiage to the like of "front seat passengers will not survive front impact events." I'm here today to tell you that is complete bunk! I T-Boned my wife's '87 Grand Am SEV6 into a Dodge Shadow that pulled out in front of me while I had the green light... and I was doing almost 50mph and stopped within 5 feet. Not one scratch on me, and not one piece of glass broke. The car did it's job... fantastically.
They're all pretty much just like movie critics anymore - whichever studio pays the most is the one who gets favor. So, I never pay attention any of that B/S.