On the same day EuroNCAP announced it had awarded the Ford Mustang just a two-star safety rating, the Australasian New Car Assessment Program has also released its safety rating for the iconic sports car, also awarding it just two stars.
This result is simply shocking for such a newly designed and popular model,â said ANCAP Chief Executive Officer, Mr James Goodwin.
âThe safety of adult occupants, child occupants and the ability to avoid a crash all form the basis of our ratings and the Mustang falls short in each of these areas.
âThereâs strong consumer expectation that a new vehicle will be 5 stars and a sports car is no different â safety should never be compromised.
The Ford Mustang rating is limited to 2 stars due to its poor performance in three of the four areas of assessment â Adult Occupant Protection, Child Occupant Protection and Safety Assist. The poorest performing area of assessment was Safety Assist with the Mustang scoring 2 points out of a possible 12 points (16%).
âIts disappointing speed assistance systems, lane support systems, autonomous emergency braking, forward collision warning and rear seat belt reminders are all missing from the Mustang,â Mr Goodwin said.
âOf concern, the full width frontal test showed a risk of serious head, chest and leg injury for the rear passenger. There was also insufficient inflation of both the driver and front passenger airbags in the frontal offset test which allowed the driverâs head to contact the steering wheel and the passengerâs head to contact the dashboard.
âThe driverâs door opened in the pole test, and whiplash protection for rear-end collisions was marginal.
âThis rating is not intended to shock or surprise â it simply presents the safety of this car against that of its contemporary competitors.â