Many Sylvania crashes involve familiar commuting routes, stop-and-go traffic, and sudden braking events—conditions that can still trigger restraint deployment issues. Residents also commonly discover problems after the fact, such as when:
- An airbag fails to deploy during a collision that appears severe enough to have triggered deployment.
- The airbag deploys but the injury pattern suggests the restraint system did not perform as intended.
- A later vehicle inspection or repair reveals that airbag components were replaced after the crash.
- A safety recall notice arrives after the incident, prompting questions about whether the vehicle was already associated with a known defect.
In practice, these facts shape what evidence matters most and what questions counsel will ask first.


