Monday, August 20, 2007

Finding the right car for your beginner


It's one of the toughest decisions any parent faces, especially in this season when cars are given as graduation gifts.
According to the Insurance Institute for Highway Safety, motor vehicle crashes are the leading cause of death among teenagers in the United States. They key reason? Lack of experience behind the wheel, the institute found in a 2006 study.
This takes the choice far beyond simple teen preferences or whether Dad should pass his car on to his daughter and get the new one he's been eyeing.
Experts such as Children's Hospital of Philadelphia and Consumer Reports recommend a passenger car as a teen's first vehicle, since these vehicles have predictable handling in emergency situations. Also, they advise, steer clear of SUVs and pickups, which are prone to roll over in emergency situations due to their higher centers of gravity; and sports cars, since some teens will be too tempted to test their performance.
"They don't know how to control all that power," says Sgt. Larry Montgomery of the Virginia State Police in Virginia Beach.
Consumer Reports magazine suggests a vehicle with sufficient engine power, with 0-60 mph time between 8 and 11 seconds.
In general, larger, heavier cars have proven safer than smaller, lighter ones in a crash. Montgomery admits that size matters when it comes to a crash. But larger vehicles may be more expensive to maintain and clumsy to maneuver. He also says that the larger heavier cars of the 1970s and 1980s, made with thicker steel and larger bumpers, don't offer safety features commonly found today.

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