Motoring: New Ford Fusion features new 'crush can' innovation
Monday, April 16, 2012 at 2:37PM
Gadjo Cardenas Sevilla in Canada, Ford Fusion, Press release, Public service, Safety

The all-new Ford Fusion's aggressive new shape also features optimized improved security features that help keep the car and those inside it safer.

The Ford Fusion has debuted two diamond square-shaped crush cans, which are hollow pieces of metal between the bumper and the front end of the vehicle structure. The new Ford Fusion starts at $17,000.

When involved in an accident, the crush cans collapse progressively to efficiently absorb the energy of an impact. The diamond square-shape design is the result of what engineers call shape optimization, or the simulation of different shapes to find the right geometry to provide additional protection for the new Fusion and its passengers.

“After testing more than 120 different shapes for the Fusion crush can, we found the diamond square to be the best shape to help offer protection at low- and high-speed impact,” said Raj Jayachandran, one of the Ford engineers who developed the crush can.

How it works

At low speeds, the crush can manages the impact energy by quickly offering resistance force due to its additional corners. This reduces the stroke and keeps the deformation within the crush cans. This progressive collapse helps eliminate damage to the rest of the car. The crush can and the bumper beam assembly is bolted onto the front rails making the parts easier to replace as well. This protection saves the driver from costly repairs to the cooling system and horn.

At higher speeds, the crush can efficiently absorbs the impact energy by completely collapsing around itself in tighter spirals to help protect the driver and passengers inside the vehicle. In a crash at 50 km/h, the can resembles a condensed screw due to the way it crushes.

The Fusion’s front-end architecture meets simultaneous standards across regions. The car’s front end is equipped to meet full frontal and offset barrier standards for North America while still conforming to European standards for pedestrian protection – thanks to hours of computer modeling and 180 validating crash tests.

New Fusion offers strength and safety

The all-new Fusion is designed with customer safety in mind. Engineers increased its body strength by 10 percent, using more high-strength steels such as boron, and added dual first-row knee airbags and adaptive front airbags that vent and tether to conform to a specific occupant’s size, position and seat belt usage.


Article originally appeared on Reviews, News and Opinion with a Canadian Perspective (https://www.canadianreviewer.com/).
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