34 safety belts – FORD 2013 Taurus v.3 User Manual

Page 35

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WARNING: When possible, all children 12 years old and under
should be properly restrained in a rear seating position. Failure

to follow this could seriously increase the risk of injury or death.

WARNING: Safety belts and seats can become hot in a vehicle
that has been closed up in sunny weather; they could burn a

small child. Check seat covers and buckles before you place a child
anywhere near them.

WARNING: Front and rear seat occupants, including pregnant
women, should wear safety belts for optimum protection in an

accident.

All seating positions in this vehicle have lap and shoulder safety belts. All
occupants of the vehicle should always properly wear their safety belts,
even when an airbag supplemental restraint system is provided.

The safety belt system consists of:
• lap and shoulder safety belts
• shoulder safety belt with automatic locking mode (except driver safety

belt)

• height adjuster at the front outboard seating positions
• safety belt pretensioner at the front outboard seating positions
• belt tension sensor at the front outboard passenger seating position.

• safety belt warning light and chime. See Safety belt warning

light and indicator chime later in this chapter.

• crash sensors and monitoring system with readiness

indicator. See Crash sensors and airbag indicator in the
Supplemental Restraint System chapter.

The safety belt pretensioners are designed to activate in frontal,
near-frontal and side crashes, and in rollovers. The safety belt
pretensioners at the front seating positions are designed to tighten the
safety belts firmly against the occupant’s body when activated. This helps
increase the effectiveness of the safety belts. In frontal crashes, the
safety belt pretensioners can be activated alone or, if the crash is of
sufficient severity, together with the front airbags.

34

Safety Belts

2013 Taurus
Owners Guide gf, 3rd Printing, December 2012
USA
(fus)

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