In Wellington and nearby communities, many crashes involve common patterns—rapid lane changes, cut-through traffic, and intersections where braking happens late. After a collision, it’s not unusual for people to learn the airbag problem in one of three ways:
- No deployment despite impact: The crash seems severe enough to trigger the restraint system, but the airbag light, wiring issue, or event logs suggest something went wrong.
- Deployment that doesn’t match the crash: The airbag deploys, but the timing or behavior appears inconsistent with what the vehicle’s safety system should detect.
- Injury that raises restraint-system questions: Burns, facial trauma, or other injuries can make it necessary to look beyond “the crash happened” and examine how the restraint performed.
If you’re dealing with injuries right now, your first priority is medical care. But you can still take steps to preserve evidence that becomes critical when an insurance company argues the injury wasn’t caused by the airbag system.


