WARNING!
•
Do not put anything on or around the front airbag
covers or attempt to manually open them. You may
damage the airbags and you could be injured
because the airbags are not there to protect you.
These protective covers are designed to open only
when the airbags are inflated.
•
Do not place objects between you and the side
airbags; the performance could be adversely af-
fected and/or objects could be pushed into you,
causing serious injury.
•
Do not attach cup holders or any other objects on
or around the door. The inflating side airbag could
drive objects into occupants, causing serious
injury.
NOTE:
The passenger front airbag may not deploy
even when the driver front airbag has deployed if the
Occupant Classification System (refer to “Occupant Clas-
sification System” in this section) has determined the seat
is empty or is occupied by someone that is classified in
the “child” category. This could be a child, a teenager, or
even a small adult. The side airbags on the crash side of
the vehicle is triggered in moderate to severe side colli-
sions. However even in collisions where the airbags
work, you need the seat belts to keep you in the right
position for the airbags to protect you properly.
The seat belts are designed to protect you in many types
of collisions. The front airbags deploy only in moderate
to severe front collisions. In certain types of collisions,
both the front and side airbags may be triggered.
Here are some simple steps you can take to minimize
the risk of harm from a deploying airbag.
1. Infants in rear-facing child safety seats should NEVER
ride in the front seat of a vehicle with a passenger frontal
airbag unless the airbag is shut OFF. See “Passenger
Airbag On/Off Switch” and “To Shut Off the Passenger
Airbag.” The rear-facing seat places them too close to the
passenger air bag in the event of a crash. An airbag
deployment can cause severe injury or death to infants in
this position.
THINGS TO KNOW BEFORE STARTING YOUR VEHICLE
31
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Summary of Contents for Crossfire 2007
Page 2: ...I n f o r ma t i o nP r o v i d e db y ...
Page 5: ...INTRODUCTION 5 1 I n f o r ma t i o nP r o v i d e db y ...
Page 58: ...I n f o r ma t i o nP r o v i d e db y ...
Page 142: ...I n f o r ma t i o nP r o v i d e db y ...
Page 174: ...174 STARTING AND OPERATING I n f o r ma t i o nP r o v i d e db y ...
Page 201: ...WHAT TO DO IN EMERGENCIES 201 6 I n f o r ma t i o nP r o v i d e db y ...
Page 218: ...I n f o r ma t i o nP r o v i d e db y ...
Page 221: ...3 2L ENGINE MAINTAINING YOUR VEHICLE 221 7 I n f o r ma t i o nP r o v i d e db y ...
Page 289: ...INDEX 10 I n f o r ma t i o nP r o v i d e db y ...