2002 Ford Explorer Owners Manual

Seating and safety restraints
Children and air bags
For additional   important  safety
information,  read  all information  on
safety  restraints  in  this guide.
Children  must  always be properly
restrained.   Accident  statistics
suggest  that  children  are  safer when
properly  restrained   in the  rear
seating  positions  than  in the  front
seating  position.  Failure  to follow
these  instructions   may increase  the
risk of injury  in a  collision.
Air bags  can kill or  injure a
child in  a child seat.
NEVER  place  a rear-facing  child
seat  in front  of an active  air bag.  If
you must  use  a forward-facing
child seat  in  the front  seat,  move
the  seat all  the way  back.
How does the air bag  supplemental restraint system work?
The air  bag SRS is  designed  to
activate  when  the vehicle  sustains
longitudinal  deceleration   sufficient
to cause  the  sensors  to  close an
electrical  circuit  that  initiates  air
bag inflation.
The fact  that  the  air bags  did not
inflate  in a collision  does not  mean
that  something  is wrong  with the
system.  Rather,  it means  the  forces
were  not of the  type  sufficient  to
cause  activation.  Front  air bags  are designed  to  inflate  in frontal  and
near-frontal  collisions,  not rollover,  side-impact,  or  rear-impacts  unless
the  collision causes  sufficient  longitudinal  deceleration.
165
Product Specification
CategoriesFord Explorer Manuals, Ford Manuals
Model Year2002
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