- Joined
- Aug 7, 2019
- Messages
- 2,420
- Reaction score
- 1,707
- Points
- 1,930
- Location
- Birmingham, UK
- Driving
- Not an MG
For those of you interested in seeing the NCAP tests
They changed things with the Zoe.. it wasn't the same car as the first version that they had tested from what I've seen which is why the results are too poor to be acceptable in my opinion.I wonder if they will have the new version tested or they are so much alike that they do not need it, as it will essentially be the same.
I would think the AEB systems would have been improved from the old to the new model, this technology moves very fast, so 3 years is a lot of time in the world of electronics.
But maybe they will not test it if they don't have to, because the tests have become more rigorous and they risk losing a star.
I saw the Zoe had a 5 star review in 2012, and they did not retest it until 2021, and then the tests were a lot more tough and the car suddenly dropped to 0 stars, which is a bit bad for a car that is sold from new, to this day.
So I’ve got a decent bit of interest in the Zoe and this issue - as we purchased one in December and after asking outright if the removal of the Automatic Emergency Braking System would render the car lower in terms of safety, they replied on Twitter (I’m sure the tweet is still there) stating that even with the removal of this feature the car I was just about to buy would definitely be a 5 Star rated NCAP car. I spoke to dealers and they also said it was rated 5 star for safety, full in the knowledge that the safety rating has lapsed and it was unrated at the time.They changed things with the Zoe.. it wasn't the same car as the first version that they had tested from what I've seen which is why the results are too poor to be acceptable in my opinion.
The tests for it are available by googling or looking on the NCAP website. Their more modern tests they also upload to YouTube too.
The thing with the new face lifted version, was the removal of the head height airbag (not curtain as there’s no airbags in the back, just front and front side) means that it’s actually less safe than the model in 2012, so it’s less safe than the model it replaced. Basically if the 2021 new facelift model took the same test that the 2012 model took, it would have a lower score and probably a lower star rating too.Wow, so they removed the curtain airbags.
That sounds awful, especially in a car as small as the Zoe.
the AEB system....Well that system is not likely to have been in the car when they tested it in 2012, not a lot, if any cars, had that kind of a system at that time.
I have to be honest and say i never even considered getting a Zoe, i have vowed to never buy a french car, which is another reason i am buying an MG, instead of a Vauxhall, even though i have never driven any other brand in the 25+ years i have owned cars.
To be fair, a car manufacturer should not be able to introduce a car, and then just produce it for 10+ years without having its safety evaulated with regular intervals, It is NOT a fair comparison to say that a 10 year old car, with 5 stars is in any way comparable to a brand new model that just got it's 5 stars.
I think even the Dacia Spring would be able to get 5 stars, if they tested it using the "rules" they used in 2012.![]()
Don’t think this is the case - they tested the base model as NCAP suggest they the base model should be no less safe than the top of the range car, so they were always going to test the base model.The other interesting thing was that Renault wouldn't supply NCAP with a car, so they went out and bought - the cheapest version! Hence few of the latest safety gadgets, hence a guaranteed fail anyway! Really odd decisions made by Renault there. The ZS NCAP results are much more reassuring!
The real reason is probably shortage in supply or cost cutting measures.The removal of the side head airbag on the new Zoe, plus Renaults blase response for doing it, is one of the reasons I have a ZS EV on order to replace my ZE40 (which has been an excellent car)
I’d say cost cutting - as every other Renault has the side head airbags and more!The real reason is probably shortage in supply or cost cutting measures.
Just like last year when Tesla suddenly said it would deliver their Model 3 and Y without the front radar for adaptive cruise control and instead rely only on the front facing camera to keep distance and emergency brake if needed.
If it had been true, what they said, that this feature would be just as reliable with the camera, it is quite the mystery why they did not remove it from the S and X models.
Also, the claim of being just as safe is obviously false, as the radar can "see" through fog, and the camera can not.
I was told that the real reason they removed the radar from the "cheap" models of Tesla was because they were able to get the radar unit, but not in quantities large enough to fit to all cars.I’d say
I’d say cost cutting - as every other Renault has the side head airbags and more!