Subaru XV 2013 News
Subaru Australia recalls more than 121,000 vehicles: Forester, XV, Impreza, and WRX models impacted
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By Andrew Chesterton · 04 Mar 2019
Subaru has launched a major 121,754-vehicle recall to fix a potential fault which can cause the brake lights to fail (though the brakes themselves will still work), with every Forester, WRX, Impreza and XV sold over a particular timeframe impacted.
High-performance concept cars debuted at 2016 Tokyo Auto Salon
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By Craig Duff · 08 Jan 2016
Flares have never gone out of fashion in Japan and the annual Tokyo Auto Salon shows why.
What are the safest cars?
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By Craig Duff · 13 Nov 2013
None of us wants to crash our shiny new car but, if we do, we want to know we're safe. That's where the Australian New Car Assessment Program's standardised crash-testing analysis is invaluable, providing comparable ratings for vehicles of all types.The ANCAP site notes that a one-star car is twice as likely to kill you as a five-star model. Carsguide examines ANCAP's results to find the best of breed in each segment. It's worth noting the advanced software in some cars that readies the vehicle if a crash is imminent are disabled during the official tests. Cars are scored out of 37 points after the following tests.FRONTAL OFFSET TEST: The subject vehicle is accelerated to 64km/h and rammed into a deformable alloy barrier to simulate a head-on crash. To increase the severity and reproduce real-world conditions only 40 per cent of the car hits the wall - equating to a driver swerving to avoid an oncoming vehicle.SIDE IMPACT TEST: The T-bone hit rams a 950kg trolley into the side of the car at 50km/h. The sled has an alloy face to simulate the front of another vehicle, which deforms and absorbs some of the impact.PEDESTRIAN TEST: Simulates the results of hitting a pedestrian at 40km/h. The test assesses adult and child impacts, given their heads and limbs strike different areas of the car.POLE TEST: This is the most demanding test in the ANCAP repertoire. Trees and poles don't deform, so all the crash energy is transferred to the vehicle. The car is put on a sled and propelled towards a fixed steel pole at 29km/h.SAFEST SMALL CARSAUDI A3 36.41 See reviews of this carOfficially the best small car to occupy in an accident. Impressively, the windscreen pillar didn't move after a 64km/h hit with the concrete block. HONDA INSIGHT 36.39 See reviews of this carIts score reflects a 3mm movement of the pillar in the frontal offset test and "slight risk" of serious leg injury for driver and passenger. BMW 1 SERIES HATCH 36.33 See reviews of this carThere's a slight risk of serious chest injury for the driver in the frontal and side crash test and a slight risk of serious leg injury for the passenger in the frontal crash. SAFEST MEDIUM CARSMERCEDES B-CLASS 36.78 See reviews of this carTops the charts with the highest score of any car in ANCAP database. Technically there's a 4mm movement of the front pillar and a slight risk of injury to the passenger leg closest the door. BMW 3 SERIES 36.76 See reviews of this carBarely behind. It showed a 1mm movement of the pillar and there was a slight risk of serious injury to the driver's and passenger's legs.VOLVO V40 36.67 See reviews of this carThe only loss of points occurred during the frontal crash test, with a slight risk of serious injury to the front occupants' legs closest the door and the driver's chest.SAFEST LARGE CARSTOYOTA AURION 36.59 See reviews of this carFirst place in this class makes it the only locally built vehicle in any top-three line-up. There's a slight risk of lower leg injury for driver and passenger. BMW 5 Series 36.53 See reviews of this carNot a bad place to be in the event of an accident either. It blitzed the side impact tests and only lost fractions of points in the head-on hit. VOLVO S60 36.34 See reviews of this carSweden maintains its safety credentials. The passenger compartment stayed intact with only a 1mm movement of the front pillar. SAFEST COMPACT SUVS SUBARU XV 35.53 See reviews of this carLike the slightly lower-riding Impreza, the XV scored highly in all crashes, with a slight risk of injury to the front occupants' chests and legs. HOLDEN TRAX 35.18 See reviews of this carThe surprise packet. One of the smaller cars in the class has only a slight risk of serious leg injury for those in the front in a head-on crash. Skoda Yeti 34.67 See reviews of this carDepite being one of the older examples in this segment, the Yeti still rates well for safety, with only a slight risk of serious leg injury for those in the front in a head-on crash. SAFEST MEDIUM SUVSVOLVO XC60 36.53 See reviews of this carANCAP says the cabin 'held its shape extremely well" in the frontal test, with the pillar shifting just 3mm. There was a slight risk of serious chest and leg injuries to the driver. FORD KUGA 36.33 See reviews of this carA solid second, posing a slight risk of serious chest injury for both front seat occupants. The front pillar moved 15mm. HONDA CR-V 35.91 See reviews of this carPlaced well despite being penalised for the foot-operated park brake moving upwards and back. Structurally there was only a 2mm movement of the pillar. SUBARU FORESTER 35.64 See reviews of this carTested this year, it scored highly in all crashes, with a slight risk of injury to the front occupants' chests and legs. SUBARU OUTBACK 35.52 See reviews of this carFills the brand's quinella. Crashed in 2008 and at the time topped the charts as the safest vehicle ANCAP had tested. SAFEST LARGE SUVSMERCEDES-BENZ ML 36.34 See reviews of this car Luxury SUV has a slight risk of serious chest injury for driver and passenger in the head-on hit and a slight risk of serious leg injury for the passenger. The pillar moved 2mm. RANGE ROVER 36.19 See reviews of this carBig Brit has a slight risk of serious chest injury for the driver and the pillar shifted by 15mm. NISSAN PATHFINDER 35.73 See reviews of this carSlight risk of serious leg injury for the driver. Unlike the other two, it applies to the upper leg as well as the expected lower-leg hits. Docked points for a marginal pedestrian impact result.
Subaru will move to all CVT autos
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By Neil Dowling · 21 Mar 2013
Subaru Australia managing director Nick Senior says “it's the way of the future” and says within a few years, the company's six-cylinder models will also be fitted with continuously-variable transmissions (CVTs).“We have only one automatic left - the five-speed automatic in the six-cylinder cars - but within a few years they'll also move to CVT,” he says at the launch of the CVT automatic diesel Outback in Wagga Wagga.Senior says that Subaru Australia “pushed and pushed to get this (Outback diesel auto) car. We've had it for 14 months in Australia for tuning and testing and even Europe used us as the test bed.”But it also led to Subaru fixing the engine at 2-litres. “The 2-litre size is governed by issues including the tax benefits of sub-2 litre cars in Europe,” Senior says.“So that's the size that was chosen for the engine and I don't know of any changes to that.” Not all models will get the combination of a CVT gearbox and the sole 2-litre turbo-diesel engine.Senior says that a Forester diesel automatic “is not a priority”. “Buyers of smaller cars don't have a priority for a diesel like the medium and larger vehicles,” he says.“The demand for a diesel Forester isn't huge and introducing an automatic version isn't seen as making a big difference to sales. “So we'll concentrate on segments where there is demand, such as the Outback segment.”He says that the diesel engine-auto combination will also not be offered in the Liberty. “We see the volume in the Outback, not the Liberty,” Senior says.“CVT is important because it's able to give big improvements in fuel economy. Of the Forester's 25 per cent improvement in petrol economy compared with the previous model, 15 per cent of that is due to the CVT.”Subaru's move to CVTs has nothing to do with a similar move by its major shareholder, Toyota that recently introduced CVT in the new Corolla and one RAV4 model. “Toyota's involvement was nonexistent in our decision,” Senior says.“CVT was signed, sealed and locked away before Subaru's tie-up with Toyota. CVT for us goes back to the 1980s in our Justy small car.”