How Consumer Reports tests cars:
Emergency handling
Crucial emergency driving tests include an avoidance maneuver and a series of at-the-limit cornering assessments around a
handling course-a snaking track loop. The avoidance maneuver is a "path-following test" in which the driver pilots the car
down a lane marked off by traffic cones with a quick left-right-left sequence. That simulates swerving to avoid an obstacle
in the road, then returning to the original lane to avoid oncoming traffic. The car threads through the course, without throttle
or brakes, at ever-higher speeds until it can't get through without hitting any cones. When testing on-limit handling, drivers
push the car to and beyond its limits of cornering capabilities to simulate entering a corner too quickly. Test engineers
evaluate how controllable, secure, and forgiving-or not-the car is.