Infants -25 small children -25 larger children -25 – NISSAN 2010 Frontier User Manual

Page 43

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WARNING

Infants and children need special protec-

tion. The vehicle’s seat belts may not fit

them properly. The shoulder belt may

come too close to the face or neck. The

lap belt may not fit over their small hip

bones. In an accident, an improperly fit-

ting seat belt could cause serious or fatal

injury. Always use appropriate child

restraints.

All U.S. states and Canadian provinces or terri-

tories require the use of approved child restraints

for infants and small children. See “Child Re-

straints” later in this section.
A child restraint may be secured in the vehicle by

using either the LATCH (Lower Anchor and Teth-

ers for CHildren) system or with the vehicle seat

belt. See “Child Restraints” section for more in-

formation.
NISSAN recommends that all pre-teens

and children be restrained in the rear seat if

available (Crew Cab models). Studies show

that children are safer when properly re-

strained in the rear seat than in the front

seat.

This is especially important because your

vehicle has a supplemental restraint sys-

tem (Air bag system) for the front passen-

ger. See “Supplemental restraint system”

later in this section.

INFANTS

Infants up to at least 1 year old should be placed

in a rear-facing child restraint. NISSAN recom-

mends that infants be placed in child restraints

that comply with Federal Motor Vehicle Safety

Standards or Canadian Motor Vehicle Safety

Standards. You should choose a child restraint

that fits your vehicle and always follow the manu-

facturer’s instructions for installation and use.

SMALL CHILDREN

Children that are over one year old and weigh at

least 20 lbs (9 kg) can be placed in a forward-

facing child restraint. Refer to the manufacturer’s

instructions for minimum and maximum weight

and height recommendations. NISSAN recom-

mends that small children be placed in child

restraints that comply with Federal Motor Vehicle

Safety Standards or Canadian Motor Vehicle

Safety Standards. You should choose a child

restraint that fits your vehicle and always follow

the manufacturer’s instructions for installation

and use.

LARGER CHILDREN

Children who are too large for child restraints

should be seated and restrained by the seat belts

which are provided. The seat belt may not fit

properly if the child is less than 4 ft 9 in (142.5

cm) tall and weighs between 40 lbs (18 kg) and

80 lbs (36 kg). A booster seat should be used to

obtain proper seat belt fit.
NISSAN recommends that a child be placed in a

commercially available booster seat if the shoul-

der belt fits close to the face or neck or if the lap

portion of the seat belt goes across the abdo-

men. The booster seat should raise the child so

that the shoulder belt is properly positioned

across the top, middle portion of the shoulder

and the lap belt is low on the hips. A booster seat

can only be used in seating positions that have a

three-point type seat belt. The booster seat

should fit the vehicle seat and have a label certi-

fying that it complies with Federal Motor Vehicle

Safety Standards or Canadian Motor Vehicle

Safety Standards. Once the child has grown so

the shoulder belt is no longer on or near the face

and neck, use the shoulder belt without the

booster seat.

Safety—Seats, seat belts and supplemental restraint system

1-25

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