Consumer Reports withdraws negative report on infant car seats
WHITE PLAINS, N.Y. — Consumer Reports magazine backed off Thursday from its recent negative report on infant car seats, saying test crashes were conducted at speeds higher than it had claimed.
The magazine reported Jan. 4 that most of the seats it tested “failed disastrously” in crashes at speeds as low as 35 mph. In one test, it said, a dummy child was hurled 30 feet.
Consumer Reports said Thursday it had received information from the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration showing that the speeds at which its side-impact tests were conducted were higher than the 38.5 mph reported.
In fact, the NHTSA said the crash tests were conducted under conditions that would represent being struck at more than 70 mph — twice as fast as the magazine claimed, said NHTSA administrator Nicole Nason.
“Consumer Reports was right to withdraw its infant car seat test report and I appreciate that they have taken this corrective action,” Nason said. “I was troubled by the report because it frightened parents and could have discouraged them from using car seats.”
The Yonkers-based magazine said it would review its study, retest the car seats and publish a new article as soon as possible.
The magazine tested the type of infant car seat that faces the rear and snaps in and out of a base.
It found only two of the 12 seats worth recommending, and it urged a federal recall of one seat, the Evenflo Discovery. Evenflo had immediately disputed the tests’ validity.
On Thursday, Consumer Reports spokesman Ken Weine said a recall was still being urged for the Discovery and for another seat which was judged unacceptable because it did not fit well in several cars.
Evenflo spokeswoman Jam Stewart said the company would comment later.