I think the point to be made here is that the knowledge about how a car deforms as it crashes simply wasn't around when the 924/44 was designed, and neither was the technology to improve things. And by technology I mean both the structural design to make crumple zones and strong passenger cabins, nor things like airbags and seat belt pretensioners and whatnot. The Volvo vs. Renault test is interesting because the Volvo was the height of late-1980's safety and yet it was annihilated by a cheap, light, flimsy Renault with crash technology from 15 years later. Bear in mind that that Volvo was bigger, heavier and stronger than our 944's, and the crash protection in that Renault will appear dated by modern standards now.
Will, thanks for the link. Those are very interesting photos (and worrying ones as well). While the photos are meaningless without information about the speed and force of the test, this one:
... clearly shows how weak the passenger cabin of the car is. It's a rear end crash, but you can see the roof has buckled above the driver's head, the rear wing has buckled badly some way in front of the wheel and (most worryingly) the sill has buckled below the door. In fact the whole sill-line seems to have been curved upwards and the door no longer fits the significantly deformed door aperture. I'm no structural engineer but that looks to me like a very weak passenger cabin.
Sobering indeed. This thread is making me slightly question my love for my 944. Yes, I'm serious.
Oli.
Will, thanks for the link. Those are very interesting photos (and worrying ones as well). While the photos are meaningless without information about the speed and force of the test, this one:

... clearly shows how weak the passenger cabin of the car is. It's a rear end crash, but you can see the roof has buckled above the driver's head, the rear wing has buckled badly some way in front of the wheel and (most worryingly) the sill has buckled below the door. In fact the whole sill-line seems to have been curved upwards and the door no longer fits the significantly deformed door aperture. I'm no structural engineer but that looks to me like a very weak passenger cabin.
Sobering indeed. This thread is making me slightly question my love for my 944. Yes, I'm serious.
Oli.