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Essential Safety Equipment
Child Restraint
Form No. 8S06-EA-03H
Seating Children in a Child-Restraint System on the Front Passenger Seat:
If your vehicle is equipped with front passenger seat weight sensors, a front passenger
air bag deactivation indicator light is also equipped (page 2-51). Even with the front
passenger seat weight sensors, if you must use the front passenger seat for children,
seating a child in a child-restraint system on the front passenger seat under the
following conditions increases the danger of the front passenger air bag deploying
and could result in serious injury or death to the child.
•
The total seated weight of the child with the child-restraint system on the front
passenger seat is approximately 30 kg (66 lb) or more.
•
Luggage or other items are placed on the seat with the child in the child-restraint
system.
•
A rear passenger or luggage push or pull down on the front passenger seatback.
•
A rear passenger steps on the front passenger seat rails with the feet.
•
Luggage or other items are placed on the seatback or hung on the assist grip, head
restraint or armrest.
•
The seat is washed.
•
Liquids are spilled on the seat.
•
The front passenger seat is moved backward, pushing into luggage or other items
placed behind it.
•
The front passenger seatback contacts the second-row seat.
•
Luggage or other items are placed between the front passenger seat and driver seat.
•
Any accessories which might increase the total seated weight on the front
passenger seat are attached to the front passenger seat.
The designated positions with seat belts on the rear seats are the safest places for
children. Always use seat belts and child restraints.
Children and Seating Position with Side Air Bag:
Allowing anyone to lean over or against the front door is dangerous. If the vehicle is
equipped with side air bags, the impact of an inflating side air bag could cause serious
injury or death to the person. Children are more likely to sleep in the vehicle; when
they do, they are more at risk in the front passenger’s seat that has a side air bag
because they may slump over into the path of the seatback-mounted air bag.
Furthermore, leaning over or against the doors could block the side air bag and
eliminate the advantages of supplemental protection. With the front air bag and the
additional side air bag that comes out of the front seat, the rear seat is always a better
location for children who are prone to sleeping. If a child can’t be seated in the rear,
do not allow the child to lean over or against the front door, even if the child is seated
in a child-restraint system.
WARNING
J16R_8S06-EA-03H_Edition3.book Page 43 Thursday, March 4, 2004 4:14 PM
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