Seating and safety restraints – FORD 2002 Mustang v.1 User Manual

Page 123

Advertising
background image

Children and air bags

For additional
important safety
information, read all
information on safety
restraints in this guide.

Children must always
be properly restrained.
Accident statistics
suggest that children
are safer when
properly restrained in
the rear seating
positions than in the front seating position. Failure
to follow these instructions may increase the risk of
injury in a collision.

Air bags can kill or injure a child in a child
seat. NEVER place a rear-facing child seat

in front of an active air bag. If you must use a
forward-facing child seat in the front seat, move
the seat all the way back.

How does the air bag supplemental restraint
system work?

The air bag SRS is
designed to activate
when the vehicle
sustains longitudinal
deceleration sufficient
to cause the sensors to
close an electrical
circuit that initiates air
bag inflation.

The fact that the air bags did not inflate in a collision
does not mean that something is wrong with the
system. Rather, it means the forces were not of the
type sufficient to cause activation. Air bags are
designed to inflate in frontal and near-frontal collisions,

Seating and Safety Restraints

123

Advertising