HONDA 2007 Element - Owner's Manual User Manual

Page 15

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After everyone has entered the
vehicle, be sure the doors are closed
and locked.

They are designed to supplement
the seat belts.

To do

their job, airbags must inflate with
tremendous force. So while
airbags help save lives, they can
cause minor injuries or more
serious or even fatal injuries if
occupants are not properly
restrained or sitting properly.

The most important things you need
to know about your airbags are:

Always wear

your seat belt properly, and sit
upright and as far back from the
steering wheel as possible while
allowing full control of the vehicle. A
front passenger should move their
seat as far back from the dashboard
as possible.

Locking the doors reduces the
chance of someone being thrown out
of the vehicle during a crash, and it
helps prevent passengers from
accidentally opening a door and
falling out.

Locking the doors also helps prevent
an outsider from unexpectedly
opening a door when you come to a
stop.

The rest of this section gives more
detailed information about how you
can maximize your safety.

Remember however, that no safety
system can prevent all injures or
deaths that can occur in a severe
crash, even when seat belts are
properly worn and the airbags deploy.

The following pages provide
instructions on how to properly
protect the driver, adult passengers,
and teenage children who are large
enough and mature enough to drive
or ride in the front.

See pages for important
guidelines on how to properly
protect infants, small children, and
larger children who ride in your
vehicle.

Your vehicle has a door and
tailgate monitor indicator

on the instrument panel to indicate
when a specific door or the tailgate
or the hatch is not tightly closed.

See page for how to lock the
doors, and page

for how the door

and tailgate monitor indicator works.

53

37

63

80

Close and Lock the Doors

Protecting Adults and Teens

Introduction

1.

Airbags do not replace seat belts.

Airbags of f er no protection in rear
impacts, or minor f rontal or side
collisions.
Airbags can pose hazards.

What you should do:

Your Vehicle’s Safety Features, Protecting Adults and Teens

12

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