In suburban North Texas, many crashes happen during routine driving—commutes, errands, and school runs—and the “defect” may not be obvious right away. People in Fairview commonly learn about airbag issues in a few practical ways:
- The airbag didn’t deploy despite a collision that seemed severe enough to trigger it.
- The airbag deployed, but injuries were inconsistent with what a properly functioning restraint system should cause.
- A repair shop noted replacement of airbag components (inflator, sensor modules, or related parts), raising the question of whether the failure contributed to the injuries.
- Recall information surfaced later—sometimes after you’ve already had the vehicle inspected or repaired.
These scenarios matter because Texas claims often turn on documentation: what happened in the crash, what your medical records show, and what the vehicle records/repairs indicate about the restraint system.


