Many Oswego drivers are on familiar corridors—short hops to work, deliveries, school drop-offs, and weekend trips that can still involve high-speed impacts or abrupt stops. In those moments, airbag problems tend to show up in two ways:
- No deployment when you’d expect it (despite a collision severe enough to trigger restraint systems)
- Abnormal deployment (deploying in a way that seems inconsistent with the crash conditions)
Either way, the legal work often turns on documentation: what happened during the crash, what the vehicle showed afterward, and how your medical records connect your injuries to the restraint system’s performance.


