Protecting children – HONDA 2000 Insight - Owner's Manual User Manual

Page 23

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Protecting Children

Your Car is Not Recommended

for Child Passengers

We strongly recommend that you do

not carry any child in this car.

One reason is that your car does not

have a back seat, and accident

statistics show that a child of any

size or age is safer when they are

properly restrained in the back seat

of a vehicle.

In addition, your car has a passenger's

airbag which poses serious risks to

children — particularly infants and

small children.

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.

As a result, we urge you to follow

these guidelines.

Infants

Never put a rear-facing child seat in

the front seat of a car 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.

Small Children

Placing a forward-facing child seat in

the front seat of a car equipped with

a passenger's airbag can be

hazardous. If the vehicle seat is too

far forward, or the child's head is

thrown forward during a collision, an

inflating airbag can strike the child

with enough force to kill or very

seriously injure a small child. If a

small child must ride in this car,

follow the instructions on page

23

.

Larger Children

Children who have outgrown child

seats are also at risk of being injured

or killed by an inflating passenger's

airbag. If a larger child must ride in

this car, see page

29

for important

guidelines on how to decide whether

a child is large enough and mature

enough to ride as a passenger, and

how to properly protect the child.

Driver and Passenger Safety

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