Airbag malfunctions often come to light in ways that don’t feel immediately “obvious.” In East Tennessee traffic, crashes can vary widely—from fast merges on I-40/I-75 to sudden stops on local arterials—so the restraint system’s performance can matter even when the crash doesn’t look “headline severe.”
Common patterns we see include:
- Airbag failure to deploy despite impact forces that should have triggered deployment.
- Unusual deployment timing (airbag goes off when it shouldn’t, or not when it should).
- Inflator-related issues where the airbag’s behavior contributes to facial trauma, burns, or hearing damage.
- Post-repair questions—the vehicle is taken in, components are replaced, and the documentation raises concerns about a known defect.
If you’re noticing symptoms after the collision—especially injuries involving the head, neck, ears, or burns—medical documentation becomes critical to linking the harm to the airbag’s performance.


