Northwest Washington driving can be unpredictable—fog, rain, and sudden traffic slowdowns on regional routes can contribute to collisions where restraint systems are supposed to protect you. In the Mount Vernon area, people often describe airbag problems in a few recurring ways:
- No deployment in a crash that “should have triggered it.” You may have had a significant impact, yet the airbag didn’t deploy, leaving you with facial, neck, or chest injuries.
- Deployment that seems “wrong for the moment.” Some drivers report an airbag deploying when the collision conditions didn’t appear to match what the system should have sensed.
- Post-crash injuries that look consistent with restraint malfunction. Burns, hearing issues, or trauma patterns can raise questions about whether the restraint system performed as intended.
- Recall-related confusion after repair. A vehicle may be serviced, but residents still learn later that their model had a safety campaign that could be tied to restraint component failures.
These scenarios matter because Washington injury claims often turn on medical causation and proof of defect or malfunction—not just the fact that an airbag was involved.


