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Few headlines would get a parent worked up faster than “Your child seat is unsafe.” That’s the subtext in a
headline about a story on combination child seats. Those are forward-facing car seats with removable harnesses; the harness stays in to secure smaller children but can be removed to secure larger children in the seat with the vehicle’s seatbelt. After
CR
examined a number of units, the magazine said five models made by Britax, Cosco, Graco, and Harmony “break in CR’s tests.”
On most of the seats, the top tether broke or harness support hardware in the rear shell broke. The Graco
65 suffered the most serious issue, when four crashes “resulted in pieces of sharp plastic in areas that may contact the child.” That happened when the seat, rated for 65 pounds, was tested with 52- and 62-pound dummies. But
CR
doesn’t say if the test dummies measured any damage, or if these failures would hurt a child.
CR
says near the beginning of the article that it “knows of no injuries related to the structural failures revealed in our
.” We have no way of knowing if the seats are truly dangerous, or if it’s only that they can’t stand up flawlessly to tests they weren’t engineered for.
That’s whee the small print comes in. The
National Highway Traffic Safety Administration
, the same agency that tests and certifies vehicles for sale in the U.S., tests and certifies all child seats. Every model tested by
CR
fulfills the government’s standard, but
to “highlight car seats that provide a greater margin of safety.” The
runs a car seat on a sled into a barrier at 30 miles per hour, for instance, while
CR
performs the same test at 35 mph. Since the baby-seat makers — like nearly all companies — engineer their products to fulfill the federal criteria, it’s not surprising the seats have small issues in harder tests.
The Juevenile Products Manufacturers’ Association
on third-party testing that didn’t mention
CR
but is clearly aimed at the magazine. The U.S. and European nonprofit organization
Car Seats for the Littles wrote a
lengthy response to the
CR
piece, saying in the end that “we stand by the industry standards,” but also, “We absolutely respect what Consumer Reports is trying to do with this reporting, but we’re not so fond of the fear-provoking headlines.” The organization
did the same thing four years ago
when
CR
changed its test protocol to go beyond the federal standard.
The companies also responded to the
CR
test, saying that they meet U.S. standards and haven’t fielded any injury reports from their seats, but that they would continue a dialogue with
CR
.
from Autoblog https://ift.tt/2UYsNqa