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GM Owner Manuals - Buick

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{ WARNING:<br />

If something is between an occupant and an<br />

airbag, the airbag might not inflate properly or it<br />

might force the object into that person causing<br />

severe injury or even death. The path of an<br />

inflating airbag must be kept clear. Do not put<br />

anything between an occupant and an airbag, and<br />

do not attach or put anything on the steering<br />

wheel hub or on or near any other airbag<br />

covering.<br />

Do not use seat accessories that block the<br />

inflation path of a seat-mounted side impact<br />

airbag.<br />

Never secure anything to the roof of a vehicle with<br />

roof-rail airbags by routing a rope or tie down<br />

through any door or window opening. If you do,<br />

the path of an inflating roof-rail airbag will be<br />

blocked.<br />

When Should an Airbag Inflate?<br />

Frontal airbags are designed to inflate in moderate to<br />

severe frontal or near-frontal crashes to help reduce the<br />

potential for severe injuries mainly to the driver’s or<br />

right front passenger’s head and chest. However, they<br />

are only designed to inflate if the impact exceeds a<br />

predetermined deployment threshold. Deployment<br />

thresholds are used to predict how severe a crash is<br />

likely to be in time for the airbags to inflate and<br />

help restrain the occupants.<br />

Whether your frontal airbags will or should deploy is not<br />

based on how fast your vehicle is traveling. It depends<br />

largely on what you hit, the direction of the impact,<br />

and how quickly your vehicle slows down.<br />

2-67

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