HONDA 2001 Passport - Owner's Manual User Manual

Page 23

Advertising
background image

If you are wearing a seat belt,

the child can be torn from your

arms. For example, if your

vehicle crashes into a parked

vehicle at 30 mph (48 km/h), a

20 Ib (9 kg) infant will become

a 600 Ib (275 kg) force, and

you will not be able to hold on.

Never put a seat belt over

yourself and an infant or

child. During a crash, the belt

could press deep into the child

and cause very serious injuries.

Children Should Sit in the

Back Seat

According to accident statistics,

children of all ages and sizes are

safer when they are restrained in

the back seat, not the front seat.

The National Highway Traffic

Safety Administration

recommends that all children ages

12 and under be properly

restrained in the back seat.

In the back seat, children are less

likely to be injured by striking

hard interior parts during a

collision or hard braking. Also,

children cannot be injured by an

inflating airbag when they ride in

the back.

The Passenger's Airbag

Poses Serious Risks to

Children

Airbags have been designed to

help protect adults in a moderate

to severe frontal collision. To do

this, the passenger's airbag is

quite large, and it inflates with

tremendous speed.

Infants
Never put a rear-facing child

seat in the front seat of a vehicle

equipped with a passenger's

airbag. If the airbag inflates, it

can hit the back of the child seat

with enough force to kill or very

seriously injure an infant.

Driver and Passenger Safety

Main Menu

Table of Contents

Advertising