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Transportation

Cars' Forward Blind Zones Are Worse Now Than 25 Years Ago (caranddriver.com) 51

Longtime Slashdot reader sinij shares a report from Car and Driver with the comment: "Lack of visibility is a significant consequence of improving safety on the front overlap crash testing." Here's an excerpt from the report: The Insurance Institute for Highway Safety has a new method to look at what drivers can't look at, and the results of a DOT study using the method suggest that things have gotten worse over the past quarter-century. [...] For the study, researchers with the U.S. Department of Transportation's Volpe Center used the IIHS method to examine every generation of some popular vehicles sold between 1997 and 2023. The models chosen were the Chevrolet Suburban, the Ford F-150, the Honda Accord, the Honda CR-V, the Jeep Grand Cherokee, and the Toyota Camry. The analysis measured how much of a 10-meter radius is visible to a driver; this distance was chosen because that's approximately how much space a driver needs to react and stop when traveling at 10 mph. The study also measured visibility between 10 and 20 meters from the vehicle.

The biggest model-specific difference was observed with the Honda CR-V. In a 1997 model, the researchers measured 68 percent visibility, while the 2022 came in at just 28 percent. In a 2000 Suburban, the study measured 56 percent visible area within the 10-meter radius, but in a 2023 model it was down to 28 percent. The study concluded that higher hoods on newer versions of both models had the biggest impact on outward visibility. The F-150 started out with low visibility (43% for a 1997 model) and also declined (36% for the 2015 version). The two sedans in the study saw the least regression: A 2003 Accord was measured at 65 percent visibility, with the 2023 close behind at 60 percent, and the Camry went from 61 percent for the 2007 model to 57 percent for a 2023. Results for visibility between 10 and 20 meters were mixed, with some improving and others decreasing over subsequent generations.

While this is not conclusive evidence across the industry, the results from these representative vehicles suggest an overall decline in outward frontal visibility. The study also notes that, during the same time period, pedestrian and bicyclist deaths on U.S. roads increased dramatically -- 37 and 42 percent, respectively. There's likely at least some causation with that correlation, even when you consider the addition of features such as automated emergency braking that are meant to intervene and prevent such collisions.

Cars' Forward Blind Zones Are Worse Now Than 25 Years Ago

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  • They are downright claustrophobic. Itty bitty tiny windows designed to make it feel like you're in a armored car or something. I think it's because the focus groups say that makes people feel safer but I just find it miserable.
    • by geekmux ( 1040042 ) on Friday June 27, 2025 @09:19PM (#65481434)

      They are downright claustrophobic. Itty bitty tiny windows designed to make it feel like you're in an armored car or something. I think it's because the focus groups say that makes people feel safer but I just find it miserable.

      Those design features don’t just make people feel safer. They actually are safer. How else do you think the average micro econobox still manages to get a modern 5-star impact rating? Those door sills creeping higher and higher meant less glass but more steel wrapped around you.

      We’re now finding the consequences of a bit too much focus on driver safety; sacrificing cyclists and pedestrians. Let’s hope sensor progress continues to get a lot better, since visibility is going the wrong direction.

      • Rollover protection is part of why A pillars are so much thicker now. The first time I drove one of them, it amazed me how much I had to keep moving my head just to keep track of what was across the intersection.

        • A pillars also now have airbags. In the 90's only front airbags were common.

        • by Z00L00K ( 682162 )

          The A pillar is now thick enough to mask an entire car while it's in the danger sector. That means that multiple pedestrians or a pair of bicyclists are also invisible.

      • We’re now finding the consequences of a bit too much focus on driver safety; sacrificing cyclists and pedestrians. Let’s hope sensor progress continues to get a lot better, since visibility is going the wrong direction.

        I wonder about how much this study's visibility number leads to actual unsafety. What I'd rather see is a test where a pedestrian, a bicyclist, or another object is placed in the 10m area and the percentage of times when the object is mostly hidden or otherwise hard to see is measured. Most objects are not so skinny that they would be mostly obscured by an A-pillar.

        Also, not so areas of the 10m area are equally important. The most challenging visibility area is one foot from the car, but that area is mostly

        • The Car and Driver story also left out a crucial piece of information. From the IIHS study:
          At longer distances (10 m to 20 m), vehicles demonstrated both increases and decreases in visibility.

          According to the study, a 10-meter radius was chosen because that's approximately how much space a driver needs to react and stop when traveling at 10 mph. Very few accidents happen when the vehicle is going 10mph because the stopping distance is normally only 12 feet, but then blind spots would play a

      • I don't know my 74 Volvo seem to do just fine. Same with the 84 Volvo station wagon I had. I miss that station wagon. I got rear-ended by a guy who just finished a 12-hour fast food shift on his way to his kid's birthday party.

        On the other hand if you're going to have a SUV the car itself is going to be a lot heavier so it's going to need more support to keep the thing from collapsing if it rolls.

        But that doesn't explain why a lot of cars are built like that. I get the sports cars because people dr
      • Baloney. The main issues with forward visibility are the huge fender flares and squared-off hoods of modern SUVs. These are styling cues designed to make the car look bigger in profile, because bigger justifies a higher sticker price.

        What about the raked roof profiles that result in absolutely no rearward visibility? They don't do that for rollover protection.

        Same reason every car now has 20" alloy wheels with rubber-band tires. They don't do that for fuel economy, improved grip, or a more comfortable r

      • How else do you think the average micro econobox still manages to get a modern 5-star impact rating?

        I'm not sure what you think you were talking about but the modern cars being discussed aren't the micro econoboxes. They still have perfectly reason able and large windows. As to how they get an impact rating you're way off with your structural knowledge. The impact rating is almost exclusively managed by the pillars of the car. The amount of steel in the door is irrelevant (and actually incredibly weak unable to stop a thing). Making the doors higher doesn't do anything for your rating.

        We’re now finding the consequences of a bit too much focus on driver safety; sacrificing cyclists and pedestrians.

        Sorry but horseshit.

  • Double whammy (Score:5, Informative)

    by dskoll ( 99328 ) on Friday June 27, 2025 @07:44PM (#65481294) Homepage

    The absurd height of SUVs etc. might make visibility worse, but it also greatly increases pedestrians' chances of dying in a crash.

    If you're hit by a low-slung car, you'll probably suffer broken legs and other injuries after you're thrown over the top of the car... not fun by any means, but much more survivable than full-body trauma from a hit from a car where the top of the hood is 4.5 feet off the ground.

    See the Insurance Institute for Highway Safety article [iihs.org].

    • Trucks and SUVs have been getting larger because of emissions standards.

      The allowable emissions were specified by the size of the vehicle, as in some kind of measure of the vehicle volume. The intent from regulators was to get trucks of a given size to become more efficient, instead trucks were built to have more air inside the volume defined by the frame and body panels. A full size truck from the 1990s is about the same size as a compact truck made today.

      Then is other bullshit means to meet emissions st

      • by caseih ( 160668 )

        There are two kinds of pollutants that emission regulations have targeted, because they are both human health concerns. First is particulates. Even gasoline engines emit particulates. There's a 50% chance AI is hallucinating, but google search told me gasoline particulate filters are a thing; I've certainly never heard of such a thing.

        Second there's NOx emissions, which are what catalytic converters are for. More efficient engines can reduce particulates, but not NOx, unfortunately. In fact increasing

        • If you really think engines don't need catalytic converters, you forget the horrible smog of the 60s and 70s.

          I can't forget that time because I'm not old enough to have any firsthand knowledge of it.

          Air quality is not great in cities today sometimes, but it's a lot better than it was before the EPA regs.

          I live on the edge of what we consider a city in the Midwest USA, which I would gather our friends on the East and Left coasts might consider a "village" or something. When the air is still we can get air quality warnings from vehicle exhaust. Most times such air quality warning come from dirt and chaff kicked up during planting and harvest time. I have no doubt that things improved since the formation of the EPA bu

      • by Z00L00K ( 682162 )

        Not emissions standards, fuel consumption standards is what has been driving the upsizing. A larger vehicle is allowed to consume more fuel than a smaller.

        The simple fix would have been to not care about the fuel consumption regulation but instead just tax the fuel more and let people bring out their calculators and figure out what fuel consumption that they could afford.

    • by tlhIngan ( 30335 )

      It won't be long for lawyers to get in on the game - that because you were driving a vehicle with a tall hood, you knew it was going to cause more damage and thus you should pay more damages to the person you hit.

      Get that going a few times and the insurance industry will adjust rates appropriately so people who drive big vehicles now have to pay for significantly more liability insurance because their vehicles are more likely to cause more damage to people.

      Shouldn't take more than a few years for it to be s

  • Is it time to bring back the awesome field of view that the AMC Pacer gave drivers?

    • As a previous owner of one? Yes. But without the three on the tree manual.
      • LOL, yeah, forgot about that. I had one of the Pacer's less ugly cousin the Gremlin. Man that car was reliable and almost the same field of view as the Pacer. Mine had a straight six 232 with three on the floor. I bought it for $300, drove it for years, and sold it for $300.

        • Long ago a coworker came in one morning looking unrested and a bit strange. He explained that he'd had a nightmare in which he was being chased by purple Pacers.
  • I can really relate to this. I have a compact SUV and seeing what is close to me is almost impossible. Something as simple as seeing the lines when pulling into a parking spot is virtually impossible. The backup camera allows you to see what is behind you when backing up, put what is directly in front of the car is completely invisible. With respect to the bicycle and pedestrian issues, I also have to admit to their total disregard for traffic rules. The number of times I see bicycles running red ligh
    • Obviously backup cameras work, so what we need literally now is forward cameras. Hard to keep your eyes on the road while also keeping your eyes on the forward camera, but with time drivers will adjust. We may even as a species eventually develop a third eye to look at the forward camera, as evolutionary pressures prune those who can't keep up.
      • My 10 year old car has front cameras which is how I can park close to the curb without my front end going over it and blocking pedestrians.
      • That sort of thing really will work its way down to every car eventually. It's already getting into cheaper and cheaper vehicles. A large percentage of modern vehicles have standard multi camera systems that do 360 views of varying quality. A fair handful of vehicles have forward night vision (intelligent low light enhancement) in the gauge cluster screen. It is or soon will be cheaper than building the car with modern crash standards and vintage visibility at the same time.

  • Modern cars are designed to ignore the other guy. All part of today's "Screw 'Em" ethos.

    • Modern US cars are designed to ignore the other guy. All part of today's "Screw 'Em" ethos.

      FTFW. In Europe our safety standards also apply to pedestrians, which is why the Cybertruck (among others) isn't road legal here.

    • Modern cars are designed to ignore the other guy. All part of today's "Screw 'Em" ethos.

      Based on auto insurance rates, I’m guessing that ethos has become an industry mantra.

  • Time to outlaw these or require a trucker's drivers license.

    • Time to outlaw these or require a trucker's drivers license.

      You say that as if SUVs are the worst example. Those who barely know how to drive can hang a damn car hauler on the ass end of a 26’ U-Haul and legally pretend they’re a trucker with zero additional training. Certainly not as popular but far more dangerous.

      • by gweihir ( 88907 )

        The SVUs have the numbers. That is what makes them the worst example and the largest risk. I am aware of the limits. For example I am allowed to drive up to 7.5 metric tons, with zero training on a vehicle this size. I once drove a 4.5t truck and I immediately felt very unqualified and did drive as carefully as never before. And I am not doing that again. But that is the point. Peopel with a normal drivers license are not qualified to drive soemthign as heavy and dangerous as a SUV. But many do because it i

  • We lost rear visibility in the name of rollover protection, and we're losing front visibility for the purpose of improving partial offset crash scores — and for style reasons in pickups, and SUVs, and cars that think they're SUVs. Square hood manly! Ugh!

    My '93 Impreza was kind of amazing to see out of, and that had great rollover characteristics. I know this because the person I sold it to got hit hard in a rear quarter on the highway at speed and rolled five times, and walked away with light scratche

  • The front, side, and rear visibility in my 2007 Jeep Wrangler Unlimited is way better than my wife's 2024 Honda CRV.

  • Many years ago, I came up with a concept to fix these issues. My concept was as follows:

    1) Cars, SUVs, and light trucks used for non-commercial purposes like commuting, short trips and "family car" duties" would remain mostly the same as they are now, with the following changes:

    a) The driver's controls inside the car would be removed.

    b) There would be a driver's seat bolted to the very front of the front bumper right in the middle, so the driver would be right at the front of the car.

    c) The necessary driver

  • I know I'm increasing my odds of dying in a car accident by driving a compact car (2010 Prius) while the streets are chocked by trucks and SUVs with tires that nearly reach my roofline. I don't have it in me to buy a pen15 enlarging monster truck.
    • I drive a small Suzuki swift. Bright red. It is fun to... swiftly move through the stream of too bulky slow SUVs. I feel young again. (Disclaimer, I am in my early forties, the age men like me buy motorcycles). Since the kids are old enough, I can drive a small car again. I missed that.
  • by glatiak ( 617813 ) on Friday June 27, 2025 @09:17PM (#65481428)

    Over the years I leased two Chrysler Cirrus cars -- both shared the same defect, the pillars on both sides of the windscreen were so wide that one or two people in acrosswalk would be hidden by them. Exterior visibility has been an issue for many years -- of the 7 cars that I have owned, only two had clearly visible corners and were easy to parallel park -- my '66 caddy and '73 benz sedan. The rest required braille parking in crowded urban areas. The only saving grace of my current small SUV is a backup camera. And don't get me started on touch screens...

    • The only saving grace of my current small SUV is a backup camera.

      I'm almost certain that backup cameras are required by federal regulations now, and that has been the case for years at this point. Maybe it's been a decade by now. I'm sure someone can look it up if curious enough.

      I could be mistaken but I recall some SUVs and trucks having two rear facing cameras now, one being the standard backup camera and the additional camera pointed down at a towing hitch to aid in hooking up a trailer. That's a nice touch over what I recall when trying to get the family truck hoo

    • One of the easiest vehicles to parallel park that I ever drove was an 84-passenger ThomasBuilt. Great mirrors, great visibility, good turning radius (for a bus). I do generally fine with my current vehicles, but they're mostly older. The newest is a 2014 Honda Pilot, and the hood is high enough it took me a hot minute to get used to the degraded visibility. By contrast, my '94 Suburban is pretty easy to see all around, and my '78 K10 is a dream (a non-moving dream at the moment, but hey, visibility is g

  • When people cant merge correctly on the highway, they will stay all the way right in their lane, have their left blinker on, so you slow to let them in, then they slow, then you slow, then they slow, at which point you say- im not getting killed for this dipshit and hit the gas. Whey they have 100 yds of clearance....then they commit to a lane change.
  • The point of windows is visibility.

  • by Sigma 7 ( 266129 ) on Saturday June 28, 2025 @12:07AM (#65481590)

    The rear view mirror blocks visibility of what's front and to the right. This makes the car rather unsafe, and it feels the mirror could at least be positioned so that it's slightly higher without obstructing the view.

    This is in addition to cars being slightly difficult to see things that are up close.

    • This makes the car rather unsafe, and it feels the mirror could at least be positioned so that it's slightly higher without obstructing the view.

      If you weren't mounted vertically in a tank your head would be below the mirror and the only thing the mirror is blocking would be the clouds, airplane and the occasionally poorly positioned traffic light. In virtually all normal cars (reads: non American SUV penis compensators), the driver is seated such that their head is well below the mirror and it's not blocking anything significant.

      You are right though, and it's one of the reasons I don't like driving our work SUVs.

  • Toyotas are really bad for visibility, most of them.

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