Owner`s manual

Seats
&
Safety
Belts
When is an air bag expected
to
inflate?
The air bag is designed to inflate
in
moderate to severe frontal
or
near-frontal
crashes. The air bag will only inflate
if
the velocity of the impact is above the
designed threshold level. When impacting
straight into a wall that does not move or
deform, the threshold level for most
GM
vehicles is between
9
and
14
mph
(14
and
23
km/h). However, this velocity
threshold depends
on
the vehicle design
and may be several miles-per-hour faster
or slower. In addition, this threshold
velocity
will
be considerably higher
if
the
vehicle strikes an object such as a parked
car which will move and deform on
impact. The air bag
is
also not designed to
inflate in rollovers, side impacts, or rear
impacts where the inflation would provide
no occupant protection benefit.
In any particular crash, the determination
of
whether the air bag should have
inflated cannot be based solely on the
level of damage on the vehicle(s).
Inflation is determined by the angle of the
impact and the vehicle’s deceleration, of
which vehicle damage is only one
indication. Repair cost
is
not a good
indicator of whether an air bag should
have deployed.
What makes an air
bag
inflate?
In
a frontal or near-frontal impact of
sufficient severity, sensors strategical
located on the vehicle detect that the
vehicle is suddenly stopping as a result of
a crash. These sensors complete an
electrical circuit, triggering a chemical
reaction of the sodium azide sealed
in
the
inflator. The reaction produces nitrogen
gas, which inflates a cloth bag. The
inflator, cloth bag, and related hardware
are all part
of
the air bag inflator modules
packed inside the steering wheel and
in
the instrument panel
in
front of the
passenger.