In a suburban community like Seven Hills, many collisions happen during commuting and everyday driving—stop-and-go traffic, quick lane changes, and sudden braking. Those factors can affect how the crash is documented and what people assume about “why” the airbag behaved the way it did.
Insurance adjusters may focus on the accident itself, not the restraint system. They may also argue that any injury was caused by seatbelts, impact angle, or vehicle speed—not by a defective airbag component.
That’s why airbag-defect cases often hinge on details that get lost after the incident:
- What the airbag did (or didn’t) do during the crash
- Whether the restraint system was repaired or replaced afterward
- Whether diagnostic logs or inspection notes exist
- Whether a recall or safety campaign overlaps with the vehicle’s production timeline


