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Air Bag Defects
While all new vehicles sold today must have frontal air bags that deploy from the steering wheel
and dash to protect you in a frontal crash, many also have side air bags to shield you during side
impact collisions.
How Side Air Bags Function
Side air bags are sometimes called side impact air bags and are abbreviated as SAB or SIAB. They
are designed to protect you when your car is struck on the side, such as during an intersection
(T-bone) accident or if your car slides off the road and its side hits a tree or utility pole.
Crash sensors for SABs are usually installed inside the bottom of the "B-pillar," which is the
post behind the front door that helps hold up the roof. In some vehicles, these crash sensors are
inside the front door or near the back seat area.
Your car, truck, van or SUV usually has at least one crash sensor on each side of the vehicle.
During a side impact crash, one of your SAB sensors should detect the sideways (lateral)
deceleration and send an electrical signal to the air bags to begin inflating.
SABs are most commonly installed inside your seat, attached to the upper part of the seat frame
nearest the door. In a few vehicles, they are installed inside your door, beneath the plastic trim
cover. These are designed to provide a protective cushion between you and the side of your car.
Types of Side Air Bags
There are three primary types of side air bags. The first is known as a "torso" air bag since it
protects only the torso or upper body. Rectangular and fairly small in size, it's often less than
18 inches tall when fully inflated.
This type was used in many of the first vehicles equipped with SABs. Unfortunately, these air
bags usually provide very little protection to your head and neck.
The second type is known as a "head and torso" bag. Taller than a regular torso bag, it extends
upward to protect the head and neck, as well as the chest and upper torso during side impact
accidents.
Generally, this type of air bag protects you much better in an accident by protecting your head,
neck and chest from the side of your car and the vehicle that hit you. This is particularly true
when you are hit in the side of your vehicle by a taller vehicle, such as a pickup truck, van or
SUV.
A more recent type of SAB is the "curtain" air bag. A curtain air bag deploys downward from the
edge of the roof and is intended to cover most of the window. That way it can protect your head and
neck, even when they would otherwise move outside the window during the accident.
For maximum protection, curtain air bags are sometimes combined with torso air bags that deploy
from the seat or door trim to protect your chest. In many cases, such curtain air bags extend from
the front seat toward the back, and can thus also protect back seat passengers.
Many people do not realize there are a lot of SABs that do not deploy during a rollover
accident, even when the vehicle rolls onto its side. That is because those SABs do not include an
appropriate crash sensor that can detect rollover crashes.
We have received reports of salespeople at car dealerships telling consumers that their SABs
will deploy in rollover accidents, even when that is not true. Such statements can cause the
salespeople and the dealer to be held responsible for misrepresentation or fraud when the air bags
fail to deploy in a rollover.
Side Air Bag Defects and Injuries
Common defects in SAB systems include failure to install a side air bag, or installing only a
torso air bag that fails to protect the head and neck. Perhaps the most common defect reported to
us is the failure of the SAB to deploy during a side impact crash. Often, this results from
defective sensor placement or defective software algorithms in electronic sensors that fail to
detect the crash severity. This can stem from negligent testing programs that do not address
real-world crashes.
Some SABs can hang up on the seat or trim panels, causing them to deploy incompletely or
improperly. Also, a few SAB systems were defectively designed to be so forceful that they can
inflict serious personal injuries or even catastrophic injuries when they inflate. Such
"aggressive" side air bags are particularly dangerous for children and infants.
These defects can cause severe personal injuries, including:
- Head trauma
- Traumatic brain injury (TBI)
- Skull fracture
- Facial injury
- Spinal cord injury
- Cervical spine fractures or dislocations
- Paralysis (paraplegia, quadriplegia)
- Arm and hand injuries, including traumatic amputation
- Chest injury
- Heart injury
- Pelvic injury
- Bone fractures/orthopedic injuries
In some cases, defects in your side air bags can cause your death.
Defective Air Bag
Lawsuit
Did an air bag defect cause your loved one’s
brain injury, brain damage, paralysis, or spinal cord injury? Did the air bag defect result in
broken bones or head injury?
If harms and losses were serious, were caused
by a defective air bag, and you need compensation to make up for your physical and mental pain and
suffering, loss of enjoyment of life, medical bills (past and future), wage loss (past and future),
rehabilitation costs, then contact a personal injury lawyer and trial lawyer in our firm to
evaluate your restraint system failure claim, promptly and in confidence.
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