Residents often report airbag concerns in situations like these:
- Front-end impacts in stop-and-go traffic: A collision occurs at an intersection or during a lane change, but the airbag fails to deploy even though the crash appears severe.
- Right-angle collisions: Side impacts or angled crashes can involve complex sensor behavior, and people notice injuries that seem inconsistent with a properly working restraint system.
- “It deployed, but it hurt more” cases: Some injuries appear immediately after deployment—such as facial trauma, burns, or other restraint-related harm—prompting questions about inflator and sensor performance.
- Buying time for repairs: After a crash, vehicles are often repaired quickly to get back on the road. If technicians replaced airbag components, those invoices and notes can become key evidence later.
Even when a vehicle is repaired, the record of what was replaced—and why—can help connect the malfunction to the injuries you suffered.


