In the Smyrna area, many serious crashes involve higher speeds and quick traffic changes—conditions that can make airbag performance a central issue in an injury claim. We commonly see disputes unfold like this:
- “The crash was severe, so why didn’t the airbag deploy?” When the restraint system doesn’t behave as expected, insurers often shift blame to the driver or the collision mechanics.
- Wrong-time deployment arguments. After a deployment that occurred in an unexpected way, defense teams may argue the impact conditions didn’t warrant the restraint system response.
- Vehicle inspection gaps. If the car is repaired immediately or the scene evidence isn’t documented, it becomes harder to demonstrate what the airbag system did during the crash.
- Recall confusion. Some drivers in Smyrna learn about a recall after the fact. A recall notice may be relevant, but it still has to be connected to your specific vehicle and the failure pattern in your crash.
The key is building a case that matches what happened to what the airbag system was designed to do.


