South El Monte drivers often face stop-and-go traffic, short gaps, and frequent turning movements at busy corridors. In these situations, crashes can be serious even when they don’t look catastrophic from the outside—especially when impacts involve:
- Side impacts near intersections (where sensor timing and deployment can be critical)
- Rear-end collisions during commute traffic that can still trigger restraint systems
- Low-to-moderate speed collisions where airbags may not deploy as expected
- Vehicle repairs after the crash that replace components, potentially changing what evidence remains
Because traffic conditions can affect how the restraint system is supposed to behave, the “why” behind an airbag malfunction often needs careful review of the collision dynamics, vehicle data, and repair history—not just assumptions.


