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January 22, 2009 5:22 PM PST

Not crashing in a Volvo XC60

by Wayne Cunningham


Although a car crash perks up everyone's attention, we got to experience the opposite in the noncrashing Volvo XC60. The folks at Volvo want everyone to know about the XC60's new City Safety feature, and they are hosting demonstrations around the country.

Volvo XC60

The XC60 stops itself a few feet short of the pylons.

(Credit: CBS Interactive)

We stopped by one of the demonstrations locations, a Volvo dealership in San Francisco, to try it out. Check the XC60 Web site to see if Volvo is holding a demonstration in your area.

City Safety is a standard feature on the XC60, a new Volvo model coming to dealerships in March. Operating at speeds slower than 20 mph, it will stop the car if it senses an impending accident. The system has a forward-facing laser that can detect objects in the car's path. If the car senses a collision, and the driver isn't hitting the brakes or turning the wheel, it will apply full force to the brakes, bringing the car to a full stop.

The system is designed to stop low-speed collisions in heavy traffic or city driving. For speeds of 20 mph and faster, the XC60 can be ordered with the radar-based precollision system, which also controls adaptive cruise control. According to Volvo, 75 percent of collisions happen at low speeds, so the City Safety system should make insurance companies happy.

City Safety graphic

After a stop, the tach display shows that City Safety was activated.

(Credit: CBS Interactive)

For our demonstration, the Volvo representative set up plastic pylons in a row to simulate the width of a car. We got in the XC60, accelerated to about 15 mph, and let the car roll toward the pylons. It was very tough to overcome years of training and not hit the brakes, but we held back as car and pylons were about to meet. But then, with about 3 feet to spare, the car jammed on the brakes. A small bit of anti-lock stutter, and the car stopped cold, with plenty of room in front. It was a weird sensation, but we got more used to it as we repeated the run a few more times.

Our friendly Volvo representative mentioned that, at speeds slower than 10 mph, the system will completely prevent a collision, while at 10 to 19 mph, a hit could still happen, although the full force braking will mitigate any damage.

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Add a Comment (Log in or register) (6 Comments)
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by Cruton502 January 22, 2009 6:19 PM PST
Pretty cool stuff. What about parallel parking? Will it not let you get to close to the car in front of you while your trying to squeeze into that tiny spot?
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by strykernyc January 22, 2009 9:16 PM PST
let say I am driving at 45mph then I slow down to 30mph and I am driving 2feet behind the nyc taxi and out of the blue the yellow taxi slam on his brake to a full stop then slam on the gas.
Will this system prevent me from hitting the car in front and what about the car behind met?
Most nyc taxi slam on their brake and gas most of the time and for no reason.

I think is wayyyy safer to have the car slow down instead of slamming on the brakes to a complete stop.
Something like the Acura RL system.
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by Zeeshan47 January 22, 2009 9:31 PM PST
You probably shouldn't be tailgating anyways. People who drive Volvos are by nature docile. Can you imagine some young punk fitting his Volvo with turbos, dubs, and a sub in the trunk? Believe me, most Volvo drivers rarely go above 20 mph :P

That being said, being from NYC is no excuse to tailgate. I'm from Chicago, and while we're not completely innocent, we sure do know when to drive aggressively and when to change lanes and bull through.
by wvivz January 23, 2009 9:11 AM PST
they should also implement this feature in parallel parking so that if you cant tell how far behind or in front you are the car will let you know so you dont nick anyone's bumber!
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by metin1980 January 31, 2009 5:24 AM PST
Thank <a href="http://www.armamed.com.tr/">Saç Ekimi</a> <a href="http://www.nakisisleme.com/">Nak??</a> <a href="http://www.armaci.com/">Firma Logolar?</a>
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by suvblogger April 1, 2009 10:56 AM PDT
Interesting and technical :) - As a normal user I would take any car or suv from volvo as comfortable and safe including the SUV XC60.

http://www.suvblogger.com
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