mrcleeaan
Registered Member
- Joined
- Jul 26, 2019
- Messages
- 487
- Reaction score
- 492
- Points
- 63
- Genesis Model Type
- Genesis G70
I've wondered the same thing. I haven't tried out G80 seats yet, but I find the flat bottom on my G70 seats are horribly uncomfortable after about an hour. On the last five hour trip I made, my butt and thighs were so sore I swore I would have to get new seats or sell the carOk, next test. Will G80 seats fit in a G70?![]()
Another possibility is that it affected crash test ratings. IIHS crashes a vehicle as-is from the dealership it buys it from. Genesis may have discovered that if the headrest is adjusted incorrectly from the factory, or adjusted by the dealer IIHS buys it from, it may impact g-force results on the head, causing a lower score. I've noticed that it seems like Genesis/Hyundai puts a lot of emphasis on IIHS awards, seeing as they're pretty much perfect across the board, so I'm sure they're a major consideration during the design process.Yep... they cut corners yet again for us North Americans..
Another possibility is that it affected crash test ratings. IIHS crashes a vehicle as-is from the dealership it buys it from. Genesis may have discovered that if the headrest is adjusted incorrectly from the factory, or adjusted by the dealer IIHS buys it from, it may impact g-force results on the head, causing a lower score. I've noticed that it seems like Genesis/Hyundai puts a lot of emphasis on IIHS awards, seeing as they're pretty much perfect across the board, so I'm sure they're a major consideration during the design process.
I'll just say this: I work as a design engineer in the automotive industry. Companies will go out of their way to test every component on the car for how it affects crash tests, and modify individual components just to increase the factor of safety to be within specs. That IIHS Top Safety Pick is worth its weight in gold.I am 95% sure that it was to save costs wherever they can.
Good points, but have always heard auto manufacturers go out of their way to save $5.00 too since that times 100k units per year is a large some of money. $5.00 at the manufacturing phase might mean sticker price changes by $50 at the dealer. Not sure of the ratio so just guessing here.I'll just say this: I work as a design engineer in the automotive industry. Companies will go out of their way to test every component on the car for how it affects crash tests, and modify individual components just to increase the factor of safety to be within specs. That IIHS Top Safety Pick is worth its weight in gold.
Also, what works on the G80/G90 may not work on the G70. The physics behind crash tests are so insanely complex, you cannot assume that what works for one model works for the other.
I'll just say this: I work as a design engineer in the automotive industry. Companies will go out of their way to test every component on the car for how it affects crash tests, and modify individual components just to increase the factor of safety to be within specs. That IIHS Top Safety Pick is worth its weight in gold.
Also, what works on the G80/G90 may not work on the G70. The physics behind crash tests are so insanely complex, you cannot assume that what works for one model works for the other.
Just went to the Genesis dealership. These headrests only adjust up and down in spite of what the manual says.I’ve tried and mine does not move either. But maybe we’re both missing something? I wouldn’t mind a slight tilt forward if possible