_RV Crash Deaths  Under Investigation - News Story - KIRO Seattle_ 
(http://www.kirotv.com/news/15995323/detail.html)   
RV Crash Deaths Under Investigation
Lack Of Crash Tests For Luxury Motor Homes Blamed
_Chris  Halsne_ (http://www.kirotv.com/station/1868106/detail.html) 
KIRO 7 Eyewitness News Investigative Reporter  

POSTED: 11:34 am PDT April 25, 2008
UPDATED: 6:21 pm PDT April 25, 2008
_Braking problems, collapsing walls and  poorly secured cabinets: These are 
the RV industry's deadliest secrets.  
We know because KIRO Team 7 Investigators just spent months analyzing  
hundreds of fatal luxury motor home crashes both nationwide and here in the  
Pacific 
Northwest.  
Investigative Reporter Chris Halsne exposes how some loose safety  standards 
are turning fun, family camping outings into trips to the morgue.  
Federal law_ (http://www.kirotv.com/news/15995323/detail.html#)  requires 
crash and rollover tests for cars,  SUVs, semi-trucks and even charter buses. 
In 
fact, the National Highway Traffic  Safety Administration just conducted a new 
series of bus tests last month. The  explosion of glass and crunch of metal 
are tools that guide new safety  improvement.  
Why, then, did KIRO Team 7 Investigators discover some of the biggest,  most 
expensive motor homes on the road are exempt?  
Peggy and Richard Young loved to camp in their 28-foot motor home, often  
taking their dog Mitzy to favorite spots along Washington's beach-front state  
parks.  
On the way home one day in 2005, Richard took the corner of a highway  onramp 
a little fast and tipped the RV over. It crumpled--trapping him inside.  
Halsne: "We're looking at structural integrity. It looks to me ..."  
Peggy Young: "It was a mess wasn't it?"  
Halsne: "That the roof just didn't hold up."  
Peggy Young: "No! All it is, is fiberglass. These motor homes are only  
fiberglass. They had the wood framing, you know, thin wood framing, but they're 
 
just fiberglass. There's nothing there to keep anything like this from  
happening."  
Richard came out of the low-speed flip-and-roll with a brain bleed. He  died 
11 days later. Peggy just couldn't believe how easily their Class A RV fell  
apart and still wonders if a few simple safety standards could have saved his  
life.  
Peggy Young: "They have some incredibly strong materials now, very  high-tech 
and I don't see why they couldn't put in some kind of reinforcement  that 
goes across and around?"  
KIRO Team 7 Investigators used a computer to analyze two federal  databases 
filled with more than 5,000 RV accident, safety and mechanical  deficiency 
reports. Summaries like:  
"VEHICLE WAS COMING AROUND A CURVE AND THE BRAKES FAILED"  
"2 DEAD -- HIT TREE AT A SLOW RATE OF SPEED, 34 MPH. THE OCCUPANT  
COMPARTMENT DISINTEGRATED"  
and  
"RV DISINTEGRATED AND ONLY THE CHASSIS REMAINED"  
made the Class A motor home stand out -- and not in a good way.  
Class A's are defined by their flat-nose front, open seating and  tremendous 
length.  
JD Gallant has been called the Ralph Nader of motor homes. He has  
investigated countless fatal RV crashes and authors a top-selling RV consumer  
buying 
guide. He has strong opinions regarding the safety of the Class A.  
“You need to realize that when you drive a Class A motor home, in case of  an 
accident, you've increased greatly your risk of death, the driver and the  
passenger,” said Gallant.  
He says the government should start mandating front-end crash tests and  
stronger rollover protections if we want people to stop dying in these massive  
machines.  
"We know from accidents, Chris, what's happening. The industry isn't into  
studying Class A accidents. They just aren't into it. If they did, if RVIA  
(Recreation Vehicle Industry Association) would study Class A accidents, every  
Class A accident, put them up on the wall and study these Class A accidents, 
and 
 say 'oh we've got to make improvement here.' They could do it. And they'd 
reduce  the deaths by 80 to 90 percent,” said Gallant.  
We called numerous RV manufacturers to respond to this investigation.  Only 
one took us up on our offer: Western RV in Yakima, the maker of the  $250,000 
Alpine Coach.  
Vice President Burk Morgan says his company sells safety.  
He adds that the government requires front-end crash and brake tests for  the 
empty chassis only. Once all those studs and sidewalls and TVs get  
installed, it's up to each manufacturer to decide how best to hold parts  
together in a 
crash. Our data shows the Alpine Coach design does hold up  exceptionally 
well.  
Morgan says there’s a reason for that.  
"The entire roof and walls are solid structures. They're all  
aircraft-quality aluminum tub-welded frame with polystyrene block insulation  
that's bonded 
together to create a solid structure,” said Morgan.  
Consumers might not yet be ready to pay extra for those safety features,  as 
two weeks after we shot the interview, Western RV closed its doors.  
Automotive safety engineer Keith Friedman of Friedman Research  Corporation 
says the costs of added safety measures are the real reason many RV  makers are 
still choosing to use antiquated construction techniques.  
"Put a steel platform out there. Put some wood on it and start nailing  wood 
two-by-fours to it or screwing on some aluminum studs. Those things are not  
going to carry the loads when you rollover. The platform is going to sit there  
and the stuff you attached on top is just going to fall over," said Friedman. 
 
Lifelong RV owner John Sandstrom isn't going to let that happen to him.  
"It's big. It weighs a lot. You can easily get yourself in trouble,  whether 
maneuvering in a parking lot or changing lanes on the freeway, you have  to be 
aware of what's going on 360 degrees around you," said Sandstrom.  
Sandstrom recently paid top dollar for custom-designed safety features  
including a third set of wheels for stability, steel rollcage ribbing and a  
bulkhead behind his seat that prevents flying objects from hitting drivers if a 
 
crash does occur. That's something that the families of several dead RV drivers 
 
tell us they dearly wish was standard.  
The Recreation Vehicle Industry Association had this to say about our  
research:  
"NHTSA (The National Highway Traffic Safety Administration) hasn't crash  
tested finished motor homes because they are fundamentally safe-- there simply  
haven't been enough deaths to warrant the cost of purchasing and testing these  
types of vehicles."  
 
Copyright 2008 by _KIROTV.com_ (http://www.kirotv.com/contact) 


 
 
Peace, Hugs, and Purrs,
Carolyn Rose Goyda
Missouri, USA
[EMAIL PROTECTED] (mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]) 
















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