Airbags are designed to work as part of an integrated safety system—often tied to sensors, inflators, and control modules. In real New Brunswick driving scenarios, people commonly report problems like:
- The airbag didn’t deploy even though the crash appears severe enough to trigger it.
- The airbag deployed but caused unexpected injury (for example, burns, facial trauma, or other restraint-related harm).
- The airbag deployed at an unsafe time or in a way that doesn’t match the crash dynamics.
- A later repair replaced components, but the underlying malfunction or warning signs were not fully addressed.
If you’ve heard about an airbag issue through a recall or a service bulletin, that information can matter—but your claim still turns on how your vehicle behaved in your crash and whether the malfunction is supported by medical records and vehicle documentation.


