Tuesday, 3 October 2017

Hyundai’s New Rear-Seat Reminder Is Actually a Little Different from Nissan’s and GM’s

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Hyundai Rear Occupant Alert

How many alerts do you need to remember that you’ve left your child in the back seat? Several, according to Hyundai, which is set to become the third automaker to install rear-occupant alert technology. But whereas similar systems in General Motors and Nissan vehicles monitor whether rear doors have been opened and closed, Hyundai’s new Rear Occupant Alert uses sensors that detect movement in the rear seat.

Hyundai Rear Occupant Alert

If someone is detected in the back, when the driver exits the vehicle a message reading Check Rear Seats displays on the center instrument cluster. And if the driver leaves the vehicle, the system will then honk its horn, flash its lights, and send a notification to the driver’s smartphone via Hyundai’s Blue Link connected-car system.

Hyundai is rolling out Rear Occupant Alert in select 2019 vehicles. GM introduced its own Rear Seat Reminder in the 2017 GMC Acadia and has since been expanding it across several Buick, Cadillac, Chevrolet, and GMC models. In August, Nissan announced it would add the Rear Door Alert to the 2018 Pathfinder, with other models to follow. Both GM’s and Nissan’s systems monitor the rear doors for activity, and both display a reminder message on the instrument cluster as the driver is exiting the vehicle. GM’s emits a series of chimes, while Nissan’s can chirp the horn. Both can be deactivated. And Hyundai’s will be able to be shut off as well, a company spokesman told Car and Driver.

Hyundai Rear Occupant Alert

To some, the idea of an alarm to remind you that there is a child in the back seat of your vehicle may seem a bit much. But statistics show that people have inadvertently left their kids in hot cars and trucks. More than 800 children have died from heat-related causes in cars in the United States since 1990, and in 55 percent of those cases parents said they were unaware their child was in the vehicle, according to the advocacy group Kids and Cars. Politicians have taken note. In July, legislation was introduced in the U.S. House and Senate that would require automakers to install rear-seat alert systems.

Called the Helping Overcome Trauma for Children Alone in Rear Seats (HOT CARS) Act, the legislation has made some traction in the House and has been duly applauded by several safety groups. But the Auto Alliance, a trade group representing a dozen major automakers, has expressed skepticism, arguing that most parents of young children don’t buy new cars, it would take two decades for the new technology to reach all vehicles, and greater public awareness is a more immediate need.

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