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My roommate and me always argue over seat adjustments. Being taller I need more leg room and like to pull it back. She has just the opposite problem. In fact, she rolls her seat so near the glove case that I got thinking about safety. You see the airbag inflates air into the bag at some predetermined
pressure. But because her seat is rolled so close upfront couldnt it be that the jerk of the airbag injures her?
My idea is this. Why cant the 'air filler' for the airbag fill air depending on how close or far the seat is. Maybe a feedback mechanism might do the trick. Or maybe this is not needed at all. I was just curious.
(?) Cadillac's dual stage system
http://www.cadillac...=airbags&year=&df=n Embedded Flash file. [bristolz, Oct 29 2004]
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Sounds like a good idea. I'd almost be surprised if they don't do it already. |
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They do. This is well baked on many upper end late model cars. Have a look around. (Start with Lexus.) |
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They also have sensors that won't inflate the bag unless a certain weight limit is exceeded on the seat, to prevent the bag inflating on a child. |
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These should really be called nitrogenbags. |
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[waugsqueke] This has not been done. |
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Airbags these days in most new domestic American models are 'second generation' airbags. This means that most have seat sensors to detect weight patterns or other smart systems to detect the passenger. |
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There are some systems that have two-stage airbags, which have two settings, in which seat position is indeed a factor, along with the weight sensor input. |
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My personal favorite safety improvement as of late is the adjustable pedal. These greatly improve short driver's positioning further from the steering wheel, which reduces their chances of injury from an airbag. |
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They're also called "advanced frontal airbags" and they use occupant size (weight and seat belt tensioner), seat position, seat belt use and deceleration G-force (impact severity) to automatically figure the level of inflation power. |
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