Automatic
Seat
Belt Injury & Death Lawsuits
Automatic
seatbelts also known as motorized seat belts have been installed in 10,000's of
vehicles. Most automatic belts come with a manual lap belt that the driver
or front seat passenger must remember to also belt. Some automatic belt came
only with a shoulder belt with no manual lap belt. These automatic safety belt
system have killed 100's and will continue until they are all recalled and
fixed.
History
of the Automatic Seat Belt
As
early as the 1950’s the auto industry tested airbags and found them superior
to automatic belts of that period as a result of their inferior performance;
automatic belts were not seriously pursued until the U.S. Department of
Transportation (DOT) took steps in 1969 to require airbags to all motor
vehicles. The industry immediately
switches gears and argued against airbags.
This switch contradicted market studies by the manufacturers that showed
consumers preferred airbags to automatic belts.
Automatic belts were a cheaper form of passive restraints rather than an
airbag. Simple automatic belt
systems cost $50-$200 less than airbag systems.
Automatic
Seat Belt Defect- People Forget the Lap Belt
The
first to sell automatic seat belts was Volkswagen, with the 1975 VW Rabbit,
which had a door-mounted automatic shoulder belt (BUT NO LAP BELT).
Immediately the injuries began. Upon
front impact, the occupant’s torso slipped under belt, but the head and necks
catches on the shoulder belt, essentially “clothlining” the occupant,
causing broken necks, spinal cord injuries and death.
Unfortunately, some automakers, including Hyundai, continued to
equip vehicles with shoulder only belts up through 1989 with the Hyundai Excel.
Later many automakers included a manual lap belt with the automatic
shoulder belt. The problem with
this “improvement” was most consumers forgot to wear the manual lap belt and
while some didn’t even know there vehicles had them.
The injuries to the occupants continued, as more and more of the
automatic shoulder belts with no lap belts, began to appear in many of the late
1970’s and into the 1990’s. As
the DOT pushed forward with the passive restraint rules, the automakers
concentrated on developing automatic belts that were easier to use but were less
protective and less expensive than air bags.
Automatic
Seat Belt System- A Defective & Deadly Design
As
automatic belts came into use, their defects and failures became apparent.
Automatic shoulder belts with separate manual lap belts had very low lap
belt use rates because the automatic feature of the shoulder belt engaging
lulled occupants into forgetting to buckle their lap belts.
The more cumbersome door-mounted belts were often detached by the users
rendering them ineffective. The shoulder-strap-only belts often caused serious
neck injuries and even decapitated occupants; and door mounted belts completely
failed to protect when doors opened in crashes, as they do 10% of the time.
The failures of automatic belts are showing up in a growing number of
personal injury lawsuits that will soon grow into a flood.
Automatic
Seat Belts End
Congress
finally killed automatic belts. In
an amendment to the Intermodal Surface Transportation Efficiency Act of 1991.
Congress required all new cars to have full-front seat airbags by September 1,
1997, with light trucks and vans having them by September 1, 1998
Automatic Seat Belt Injury & Death Lawsuits
If
you or a loved one has been seriously injured as a result of a automatic
shoulder belt with or without a manual lap belt, then you may have a right
to file a products liability case against the manufacturers of these dangerous
seatbelts. Please call for a free confidential consultation at 1-800-883-9858 or
at (713) 654-4040

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