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Besides China's Landwind & Shuanghuan, Indian REVA G-Wiz Electric Vehicle also failed crash test, luckily it's categorized as "quadricycle".
Top Gear decided to have the little battery powered vehicles -REVA G-Wiz put through the EuroNCAP (new car assessment program) crash test to see how well it does.
Test conducted by Transport Research Laboratory, UK on April 27, 2007.
The car was crashed into a barrier at 40 mph and the likelihood of the driver surviving was slim as shown in the photos above.
G-Wiz is categorized as "quadricycle" - "a vehicle with four wheels whose unladen mass is not more than 400kg (excluding batteries if it is an electric vehicle) and whose maximum continuous rated power does not exceed 15 kW," according to the Department for Transport, UK.
Source:
Top Gear
Besides China's Landwind & Shuanghuan, Indian REVA G-Wiz Electric Vehicle also failed crash test, luckily it's categorized as "quadricycle".

Top Gear decided to have the little battery powered vehicles -REVA G-Wiz put through the EuroNCAP (new car assessment program) crash test to see how well it does.

Test conducted by Transport Research Laboratory, UK on April 27, 2007.
The car was crashed into a barrier at 40 mph and the likelihood of the driver surviving was slim as shown in the photos above.

G-Wiz is categorized as "quadricycle" - "a vehicle with four wheels whose unladen mass is not more than 400kg (excluding batteries if it is an electric vehicle) and whose maximum continuous rated power does not exceed 15 kW," according to the Department for Transport, UK.





Source:
Top Gear
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