During a frontal crash, your seat belt
restrains your lower body and torso,
and the front airbag helps protect
your head and chest.
Although both airbags normally
inflate within a split second of each
other, it is possible for only one
airbag to deploy.
This can happen if the severity of a
collision is at the margin, or
threshold, that determines whether
or not the airbags will deploy. In
such cases, the seat belt will provide
sufficient protection, and the
supplemental protection offered by
the airbag would be minimal.
Only the driver’s airbag can deploy if
there is no passenger in the front
seat, or if the advanced airbag
system has turned the passenger’s
airbag off (see page
).
If you ever have a moderate to
severe frontal collision, sensors will
detect the vehicle’s rapid
deceleration.
If the rate of deceleration is high
enough, the control unit will instantly
inflate the driver’s and front
passenger’s airbags, at the time and
with the force needed.
An indicator on the instrument
panel that alerts you that the
passenger’s side airbag has been
turned off (see page
).
An indicator on the instrument
panel that alerts you to a possible
problem with your airbags,
sensors, or seat belt tensioners
(see page
).
An indicator on the dashboard that
alerts you that the passenger’s
front airbag has been turned off
(see page
).
Emergency backup power in case
your vehicle’s electrical system is
disconnected in a crash.
33
32
34
34
How Your Front Airbags Work
Additional Information About Your Airbags
26
08/07/29 17:27:09 31TK4600 0031
Summary of Contents for 2009 TL Navigation System
Page 6: ...08 07 29 17 23 34 31TK4600 0005 ...
Page 66: ...60 08 07 29 17 31 51 31TK4600 0065 ...
Page 490: ...484 08 07 29 18 55 02 31TK4600 0489 ...
Page 538: ...532 08 07 29 19 07 35 31TK4600 0537 ...
Page 586: ...580 08 07 29 19 14 00 31TK4600 0585 ...
Page 616: ...610 08 07 29 19 17 45 31TK4600 0615 ...
Page 634: ...628 08 07 29 19 20 14 31TK4600 0633 ...