Many Helena drivers spend their days on predictable routes—commutes to work, school runs, and errands that put them on busy multi-lane roads and traffic-flow intersections. That matters because airbag performance is evaluated against the crash conditions.
In practice, claims often hinge on details like:
- Speed and angle at impact (especially in intersection or merge collisions)
- Seat position and occupant posture (important when airbags deploy differently than expected)
- Post-crash documentation (what was recorded at the scene and during towing/inspection)
- Repair-shop findings (what technicians documented about the restraint system)
If your injuries don’t “match” what you expected from a properly working airbag, that mismatch can be a key part of your case—but only if the record is built early and accurately.


